accessibility-issues
accessibility issues
These are externally raised issues about accessibility with broadly varying degrees of merit. Thus some issues may be REJECTED for a number of obvious reasons (but still documented here in case they are re-raised), and others contain longer discussions. Some issues may be ACCEPTED and perhaps cause changes or improved explanations in the spec.
IMPORTANT: Please read the accessibility FAQ before giving any feedback or raising any issues as your feedback/issues may already be resolved/answered.
Submitted issues may (and probably will) be edited and rewritten for better terseness, clarity, calmness, rationality, and as neutral a point of view as possible. Write your issues well. — Tantek
Please add new issues to the top of the list. Please follow-up to resolved/rejected issues with new information rather than resubmitting such issues. Duplicate issue additions will be reverted.
Issues
- open issue! 2006-10-06 raised by John Foliot in w3c-wai-ig
What we don't need (IMHO) is a web where everything is simply a <div> with some extraneous Microformats style association added to it.
- open issue! 2006-09-20 raised by Andy Mabbett in accessifyforum
- Use of 'abbr' in microformats
hCalendar
hCalendar specific accessibility issues. These are separated from the hCalendar issues in general so that they are not lost among other non-accessibility related issues.
- open issue! 2007-01-20 raised by Andy Mabbett
- Where
DTEND
is a date, and not a date-time, it is required to be the day after the end of the event, thus:<abbr class="dtend" title="2007-04-30">29 April 2007</abbr>
. However, "29 April 2007" is not an abbreviation of 2007-04-30; it is an abbreviation of 2007-04-29. The markup as shown is semantically incorrect and likely to cause problems for users and user-agents which read the title attribute, and not the text value, of theabbr
element.
- Where
- open issue! 2006-12-11 raised by Andy Mabbett
- The image in hcalendar-brainstorming#Photos and other attachments has inappropriate alt text, being just the file mname. Andy Mabbett 15:23, 6 Mar 2007 (PST)
abbr-design-pattern
- open issue! 2007-04-27 raised by James Craig, Bruce Lawson.
- Article and discussion about why some instances of the abbr-design-pattern may be bad for accessibility.
Accessibility of this wiki
- open issue! 2006-11-26 raised by Andy Mabbett
- open issue! 2006-12-11 raised by Andy Mabbett
- Duplicating link text breaches WAI-WCAG 1 guideline 13.1 Clearly identify the target of each link and is unhelpful to users of assistive technologies and other agents, which provide links in a stand-alone, out-of-context list. Andy Mabbett 10:29, 11 Dec 2006 (PST)
Template
Please use this format (copy and paste this to the beginning of the list to add your issues):
- open issue! YYYY-MM-DD raised by YOURNAME.
- Issue 1: Here is the first issue I have.
- Issue 2: Here is the second issue I have.
Resolved Issues
Issues that are resolved but may have outstanding to-do items.
- ...
Closed Issues
Resolved issues that have no further actions to take.
- 2006-11-26 raised by Andy Mabbett
- Using emboldening and italics to differentiate types on, e.g. the cheatsheet pages hcard-cheatsheet, is unhelpful to users of assistive technologies, text-only devices, etc. A number, letter or symbol should additionally be used. Andy Mabbett 14:33, 26 Nov 2006 (PST)
- I think the emboldening is fine as it marks up the required properties. The italics are a bit of a problem but keep it simple at the moment. Additional characters can’t be used as they would break the class="property" template. Colours would be a way but are inaccessible to some users, so there is no real solution to that problem for now. Julian Stahnke 22:55, 26 Nov 2006 (GMT)
- "I think the emboldening is fine" - how would you understand emboldening in a text-only browser like Lynx, or in an aural browser? Andy Mabbett 15:17, 26 Nov 2006 (PST)
- Ups, I just assumed that it would use strong and em tags. Yeah, well, let’s think about it. Julian Stahnke 23:22, 26 Nov 2006 (GMT)
- "I think the emboldening is fine" - how would you understand emboldening in a text-only browser like Lynx, or in an aural browser? Andy Mabbett 15:17, 26 Nov 2006 (PST)
- Of course, one could add that stuff after the class="property" thing. That might look a little cluttered though. I’ll consider that for the next revision/next cheat sheet I do. Julian Stahnke 22:57, 26 Nov 2006 (GMT)
- All that's needed is:
- I think the emboldening is fine as it marks up the required properties. The italics are a bit of a problem but keep it simple at the moment. Additional characters can’t be used as they would break the class="property" template. Colours would be a way but are inaccessible to some users, so there is no real solution to that problem for now. Julian Stahnke 22:55, 26 Nov 2006 (GMT)
- Using emboldening and italics to differentiate types on, e.g. the cheatsheet pages hcard-cheatsheet, is unhelpful to users of assistive technologies, text-only devices, etc. A number, letter or symbol should additionally be used. Andy Mabbett 14:33, 26 Nov 2006 (PST)
- * class="vcard" (1)
- instead of:
- * class="vcard"
- Andy Mabbett 15:24, 26 Nov 2006 (PST)
- Now resolved. Thanks to all who helped. Andy Mabbett 10:30, 11 Dec 2006 (PST)