- From: John Foliot <john@foliot.ca>
- Date: Mon, 2 Jul 2012 12:37:47 -0700
- To: "'HTML Accessibility Task Force'" <public-html-a11y@w3.org>, "'W3C WAI-XTECH'" <wai-xtech@w3.org>
- Cc: "'fantasai'" <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>, <public-cssacc@w3.org>, <www-style@w3.org>
Cc: HTML5 Accessibility Task Force PFWG via WAI-Xtech FYI. Comments? fantasai wrote: > > On 06/20/2012 03:26 PM, fantasai wrote: > > I'm going to walk us through some a11y-related questions. :) > > > > Flexbox allows page content to be reordered. > > Two questions arising from this are then: > > A. Should tab-order be affected? > > B. Should speech order be affected? > > > > I'm putting both in the same thread because we have this consistency > > question: > > * Should tab-order be consistent with speech order or visual order, > > if they are different? > > > > Flexbox allows content reordering in two ways: > > 1. 'flex-direction: row | row-reverse | column | column-reverse ', > > which can effectively reverse the order of items > > 2. 'order: <number>', which can arbitrarily reorder flex items > > Proposal: > > * Neither 'order' nor reversing affects rendering in non-visual > media. > This keeps them consistent with non-CSS UAs, and allows the author > to perform visual reordering without affecting non-visual > displays, > which will use the source document's linear (and ideally logical) > order. Best practice for accessibility will continue to be that > the > source order is logical; 'order' and reversing allow the source > order to remain logical while the author manipulates the visual > order. > > * The 'tab-order' is also not affected by either 'order' or > reversing. > However, in the future, the CSSWG may introduce a way to have tab > order follow the visual order instead of the logical one.
Received on Monday, 2 July 2012 19:38:20 UTC