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…in reply to @axbom
I wanted to go with the longdesc attribute for my cartoons. I was at first worried I would have to create one html document per cartoon but the longdesc attribute accepts anchor links which means all the descriptions can go into one document. 👍 #a11y
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…in reply to @axbom
But realizing now that longdesc is not supported by all screen readers and I've come to understand that Apple is against it for reasons outlined here... lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-admin/2014Aug/0028.html #a11y
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…in reply to @axbom
The suggestion seems to be to go with the details attribute of the figure tag, and here is a proof-of-concept for this technique: cookiecrook.com/longdesc/details/ #a11y
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…in reply to @axbom
More alternatives to longdesc are outlined here: cookiecrook.com/longdesc/ #a11y Based on this I'm leaning towards a standard link in the figure caption.
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…in reply to @axbom
Also: read this: ""Longdesc affords authors the native capability to provide information that is essential for blind and visually impaired users but would be redundant for sighted users and unacceptable to visual designers' aesthetics." Unacceptable in this context made me jump.
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…in reply to @axbom
That's an actual quote from the W3C HTML Accessibility Task Force wiki on Verbose desc reqs (Verbose Descriptor Requirements). w3.org/WAI/PF/HTML/wiki/Verbose_desc_reqs
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…in reply to @axbom
And now I'm trying to truly grasp accessible modal windows once and for all (which by no means is an easy problem to solve): marcozehe.de/2015/02/05/advanced-aria-tip-2-accessible-modal-dialogs/ I'm a bit saddened by how much of hassle this is to get right. Once I'm confident about a solution I'll do a write-up.
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…in reply to @axbom
Just adding the wonderful HTML5 outliner to this thread for easy reference by myself. gsnedders.html5.org/outliner/