Am 01/22/2014 03:50 AM, schrieb Nancy K:
I don't know if any of these links will help -
Invisible content just for screen reader users:
http://webaim.org/techniques/css/invisiblecontent/#techniques
Thanks for this. The H1 text is now styled with "display: none;".
Cynthia Says for Section 508/WCAG2.0 (A thru AAA) accessibility (enter the url
online):
http://www.cynthiasays.com/?
Colorblind tests (enter url online):
http://colorfilter.wickline.org/
html5 validator:
html5.validator.nu
I've not yet looked into these webpages but I fear we will have much to
do. ;-)
Marcus
________________________________
From: Rob Weir<apa...@robweir.com>
To: "dev@openoffice.apache.org"<dev@openoffice.apache.org>
Sent: Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:39 PM
Subject: Re: First look at www.openoffice.org accesibility
On Tue, Jan 21, 2014 at 4:09 PM, Marcus (OOo)<marcus.m...@wtnet.de> wrote:
In the meantime it's already online on www.oo.o. I've added a h1 tag and
fixed the double-link problem.
@Rob:
Please can you test if this is now OK in the screen reader?
Thanks
Here's the tool I used to check:
http://wave.webaim.org
The duplicate links problem is gone. That's good news.
The error about the missing<h1> is gone. But now it gives an error
for the<h1> with no content.
I wonder whether the "real" solution here is to make those main
options into<h1>'s and update the CSS accordingly? If we use a
specific class for those headers we won't conflict with the<h1>'s on
other pages, which are styled differently.
The only other error we have on the home page (and the other templated
pages) is the lack of the language identifier, and it sounds like Dave
had a good solution there.
Regards,
-RobboR
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