Difference between revisions of "Accessibility Testing"
Jadelennox (Talk | contribs) (→Keyboard-only Users: keyboard navigation by alternative text) |
(→Low Vision: ** Some browsers (e.g. Firefox: View | Zoom | Zoom Text Only) can be set to scale only text vs. scale text and images; have to test both modes on browsers that do this.) |
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* Font size | * Font size | ||
* Robustness of layout to font size increases (eg command-+/ctrl-+) under IE, Firefox, Safari, etc - they differ so need to test all. | * Robustness of layout to font size increases (eg command-+/ctrl-+) under IE, Firefox, Safari, etc - they differ so need to test all. | ||
+ | ** Some browsers (e.g. Firefox: View | Zoom | Zoom Text Only) can be set to scale only text vs. scale text and images; have to test both modes on browsers that do this. | ||
* Alternate layouts with less visual "clutter"/"noise" if needed (eg LJ's Lynx sitescheme) | * Alternate layouts with less visual "clutter"/"noise" if needed (eg LJ's Lynx sitescheme) | ||
Revision as of 16:11, 4 February 2009
Preliminary notes on accessibility testing. Rickybuchanan 13:04, 4 February 2009 (UTC)
Accessibility is not the same as usability, but it overlaps.
Some stuff can be tested automatically with tools - eg validation - but lots of it can't and comes down to human judgement. Good description here: What accessibility testing is possible Even they miss some stuff - contrast appropriate for dyslexics, moving image problems that people with some neuro deficits have, everything important being keyboard-only accessible. Probably more I forget.
Disabilities which have relevance to web accessibility:
Contents
Blindness
The one everybody thinks about.
- CAPTCHAs
- Screen reader friendliness (JAWS, WindowEyes, VoiceOver, NVDA, others?)
- Check tab order for everything, especially things which are AJAXey
Color Blindness
Deafness
- Make sure any videos put on the site officially (eg "how to use" screencasts) have captions available.
Deafblindness
Double-whammy as many of the solutions to problems faced by blind or deaf users rely on the other sense - eg audio alternatives to CAPTCHAs.
Dyslexia
- Contrast (too high can be a problem)
- CAPTCHAs
Keyboard-only Users
- Make sure anything triggered usually by mouse movements (eg :hover attributes) which is needed for site use has a keyboard-accessible alternative.
- Check tab order for everything, especially things which are AJAXey
- Potentially hideable alternative text for all images which are used for site navigation and control (e.g. the "tag/memory/etc." icons) for direct keyboard access. Note this is not the same as alt tags.
Low Vision
- Contrast (low is a problem)
- CAPTCHAs
- Font size
- Robustness of layout to font size increases (eg command-+/ctrl-+) under IE, Firefox, Safari, etc - they differ so need to test all.
- Some browsers (e.g. Firefox: View | Zoom | Zoom Text Only) can be set to scale only text vs. scale text and images; have to test both modes on browsers that do this.
- Alternate layouts with less visual "clutter"/"noise" if needed (eg LJ's Lynx sitescheme)
Neurological Problems
- Things that move
- CAPTCHAs