- From: Arnold, Curt <Curt.Arnold@hyprotech.com>
- Date: Wed, 12 Dec 2001 12:42:51 -0700
- To: "'rayw@netscape.com'" <rayw@netscape.com>, Richard Schwerdtfeger <schwer@us.ibm.com>
- Cc: "Ian B. Jacobs" <ij@w3.org>, Philippe Le Hegaret <plh@w3.org>, w3c-wai-ua@w3.org, w3c-wai-ua-request@w3.org, www-dom@w3.org
The cross-posting should probably stop, could we move all discussion to www-dom@w3.org? Is it a requirement that existing documents can be mined for "commands" that can be issued or simply that the solution enables new documents can publish "commands" that could be issued by assistive technologies? As Ray mentioned, the current proposal would only give you the object address of the handler and the assistive technology would have to fabricate appropriate UIEvents by deceiphering from some sort of universal bytecode reflection on the Java, JavaScript, VBScript, Java, Python, C#, etc, implementation of the handler. Without diving into the source code, how would you know what keystrokes a keydown handler responded to? It would seem a whole lot simplier to create a CommandQueryEvent that you could send at an element that would collect event that you could fire to accomplish some user goal. This would let documents that wanted to publish accessible commands could do so. Something like: public interface DocumentEvent { ... UICommandQueryEvent createUICommandQueryEvent(); UICommand createUICommand(EventTarget target, Event event, DOMString name, DOMString descriptionURI); } public interface UICommandQueryEvent { // // this would be called during dispatch // public void addCommand(Command command); // // these would be called after dispatch // int getLength(); Command getItem(int index); } public interface UICommand { EventTarget getEventTarget(); Event getEvent(); DOMString getName(); // // this could be some XML resource the describes all sorts // of additional things (VoiceXML, locale-specific descriptions) // about the command DOMString getDescriptionURI(); } As for intercepting and disabling opening new windows events, I think that is really an issue of security rights on objects implemented by the browser and not a DOM issue. onLoad events could typically be doing very legitimate things and the nasty things could just move to a different event (like a focus change). Ideally, a browser could let assistive technology participate in determining in the resolution of a window.open() or similar call.
Received on Wednesday, 12 December 2001 14:44:03 UTC