Alternative text descriptions or alt text are text equivalents for non-text elements in a document. The key principle is that computers and screen readers cannot analyze an image and determine what the image presents. For users who rely on screen readers to understand documents, alt texts ensure that they receive the same relevant information that a sighted person receives. This ensures their overall online experience is just as informative and relevant.
Alt texts are applied to non-text elements such as:
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Unfortunately, there remains a large majority of images available out there that have missing, incorrect, or poor alternative text.
Alternative text can be presented in two ways:
Read more : Is There a Standard Sink Size?
An alt-text should typically:
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines recommends that data tables include a summary of the information presented. The purpose is to give a brief orientation to the structure and purpose of the table. This orientation information provides valuable context for the user who is about to be presented with an array of data. Screen readers accommodate this by announcing the text of that summary attribute as the user enters a table.
Graphs and charts are similar to images in the sense that the the data they present can not be read the same way was it can with a table. A summary should still be provided so that the information conveyed by them is available to the user. A summary of a graph or chart might include things like a data trend or an average value etc.
Often many non-text elements within a document that are simply used for layout, visual decoration or do not provide the document user with any useful information or context. Stock photography and clipart images usually fall into this category. Providing descriptions such as “a blue swoosh logo” or “Woman working on a computer” is useless. These elements do not require alt-texts and can be marked as decorative so they are ignored by screen readers.
Include captions and/or summaries for tables, charts, figures, diagrams or graphs where required.
If your documents contain any non-text elements, you can check with your publishing software manuals for instructions on how to add alt-texts. Alternatively, you can contact us for direction. If you would like us to add the alt-texts into your document for you, please download our alt-text template and complete the form.
You may also like to check out our article on Accessible Document Design, or download our Quick reference checklist for Accessible Document Design.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Kitchens
This post was last modified on 13/10/2023 18:14
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