User:Mzajac/Accessibility/WCAG 1.0

Assessment of Wikipedia's page template according to WCAG 1.0. Checkpoints are grouped by priority, as in the checklist. There may be references to the Samurai Errata.

This disregards any article content, and behaviours and templates which affect article content. This is intended to establish a baseline for assessing the accessibility of articles, and to identify deficiencies the WikiMedia software and Wikipedia's implementation of it.

Status: completed A-level evaluation, except for scripts. —Michael Z. 2009-01-19 18:46 z 

Priority 1
Must be satisfied, providing A conformance


 * 1.1 Provide a text equivalent for every non-text element (e.g., via "alt", "longdesc", or in element content). This includes : images, graphical representations of text (including symbols), image map regions, animations (e.g., animated GIFs), applets and programmatic objects, ascii art, frames, scripts, images used as list bullets, spacers, graphical buttons, sounds (played with or without user interaction), stand-alone audio files, audio tracks of video, and video.
 * Wikipedia logo is a CSS background-image on an empty link, with the title “Visit the main page [ctrl-z]”. The link is duplicated in a link with text “Main page”, and the logo text “Wikipedia  The Free Encyclopedia” is duplicated in the subtitle below the page heading.
 * List-bullet images are provided by the list-style-image CSS property.
 * Image link with logo & text “Powered By MediaWiki” has alt text “Powered by MediaWiki”.
 * (minor) Image link with logo & text “A WIKIMEDIA project” has alt text “Wikimedia Foundation”—this should be adjusted to match. See Bug 17101: Wikimedia badge alt text should match image text.
 * 2.1 Ensure that all information conveyed with color is also available without color, for example from context or markup.
 * Red links (e.g., an absent discussion page) are indicated using colour applied by CSS—this could be indicated as it is in article text, by an appending “(page does not exist)” to the title attribute. Or the text could be edited, e.g., from “Discussion about the content page” to “Start discussion about the content page”.  See Bug 17099 Red-link “discussion” tab indicated by colour only.
 * 4.1 Clearly identify changes in the natural language of a document's text and any text equivalents (e.g., captions).
 * Interwiki links are languages' names in the foreign language, but their language is not indicated. See Bug 4901: lang and hreflang attributes for interwiki links.  WCAG 1.0 requires lang and xml:lang attributes, the Samurai errata add the requirement for hreflang.
 * 6.1 Organize documents so they may be read without style sheets. For example, when an HTML document is rendered without associated style sheets, it must still be possible to read the document.
 * [The HTML is organized so that article text precedes the navigation; skip links are provided]
 * 6.2 Ensure that equivalents for dynamic content are updated when the dynamic content changes.
 * [Javascript should be audited]
 * 7.1 Until user agents allow users to control flickering, avoid causing the screen to flicker.
 * [No flickering]
 * 14.1 Use the clearest and simplest language appropriate for a site's content.
 * [Looks okay]

And if you use images and image maps (Priority 1) [no image maps]
 * 1.2 Provide redundant text links for each active region of a server-side image map.
 * 9.1 Provide client-side image maps instead of server-side image maps except where the regions cannot be defined with an available geometric shape.

And if you use tables (Priority 1) [no tables]
 * 5.1 For data tables, identify row and column headers.
 * 5.2 For data tables that have two or more logical levels of row or column headers, use markup to associate data cells and header cells.

And if you use frames (Priority 1) [no frames]
 * 12.1 Title each frame to facilitate frame identification and navigation.

And if you use applets and scripts (Priority 1) [a simple page appears to be readable and editable without JavaScript]
 * 6.3 Ensure that pages are usable when scripts, applets, or other programmatic objects are turned off or not supported. If this is not possible, provide equivalent information on an alternative accessible page.

And if you use multimedia (Priority 1) [no multimedia]
 * 1.3 Until user agents can automatically read aloud the text equivalent of a visual track, provide an auditory description of the important information of the visual track of a multimedia presentation.
 * 1.4 For any time-based multimedia presentation (e.g., a movie or animation), synchronize equivalent alternatives (e.g., captions or auditory descriptions of the visual track) with the presentation.

And if all else fails (Priority 1)
 * 11.4 If, after best efforts, you cannot create an accessible page, provide a link to an alternative page that uses W3C technologies, is accessible, has equivalent information (or functionality), and is updated as often as the inaccessible (original) page.

Priority 2
Should be satisfied, providing AA conformance.


 * 2.2 Ensure that foreground and background color combinations provide sufficient contrast when viewed by someone having color deficits or when viewed on a black and white screen. [Priority 2 for images, Priority 3 for text].
 * 3.1 When an appropriate markup language exists, use markup rather than images to convey information.
 * 3.2 Create documents that validate to published formal grammars.
 * 3.3 Use style sheets to control layout and presentation.
 * 3.4 Use relative rather than absolute units in markup language attribute values and style sheet property values.
 * 3.5 Use header elements to convey document structure and use them according to specification.
 * The subheading “From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia” is marked up as an h3, but this informative text is not serving as a structural heading at all, and shouldn't be marked up as a header element. Furthermore, headings should be nested in order, so only an h2 should follow the page title, an h1.  See Bug 457: Clean up use of header tags in MonoBook skin UI elements.
 * 3.6 Mark up lists and list items properly.
 * 3.7 Mark up quotations. Do not use quotation markup for formatting effects such as indentation.
 * 6.5 Ensure that dynamic content is accessible or provide an alternative presentation or page.
 * 7.2 Until user agents allow users to control blinking, avoid causing content to blink (i.e., change presentation at a regular rate, such as turning on and off).
 * 7.4 Until user agents provide the ability to stop the refresh, do not create periodically auto-refreshing pages.
 * 7.5 Until user agents provide the ability to stop auto-redirect, do not use markup to redirect pages automatically. Instead, configure the server to perform redirects.
 * 10.1 Until user agents allow users to turn off spawned windows, do not cause pop-ups or other windows to appear and do not change the current window without informing the user.
 * 11.1 Use W3C technologies when they are available and appropriate for a task and use the latest versions when supported.
 * 11.2 Avoid deprecated features of W3C technologies.
 * 12.3 Divide large blocks of information into more manageable groups where natural and appropriate.
 * 13.1 Clearly identify the target of each link.
 * 13.2 Provide metadata to add semantic information to pages and sites.
 * 13.3 Provide information about the general layout of a site (e.g., a site map or table of contents).
 * 13.4 Use navigation mechanisms in a consistent manner.

And if you use tables (Priority 2)
 * 5.3 Do not use tables for layout unless the table makes sense when linearized. Otherwise, if the table does not make sense, provide an alternative equivalent (which may be a linearized version).
 * 5.4 If a table is used for layout, do not use any structural markup for the purpose of visual formatting.

And if you use frames (Priority 2)
 * 12.2 Describe the purpose of frames and how frames relate to each other if it is not obvious by frame titles alone.

And if you use forms (Priority 2)
 * 10.2 Until user agents support explicit associations between labels and form controls, for all form controls with implicitly associated labels, ensure that the label is properly positioned.
 * 12.4 Associate labels explicitly with their controls.

And if you use applets and scripts (Priority 2)
 * 6.4 For scripts and applets, ensure that event handlers are input device-independent.
 * 7.3 Until user agents allow users to freeze moving content, avoid movement in pages.
 * 8.1 Make programmatic elements such as scripts and applets directly accessible or compatible with assistive technologies [Priority 1 if functionality is important and not presented elsewhere, otherwise Priority 2.]
 * 9.2 Ensure that any element that has its own interface can be operated in a device-independent manner.
 * 9.3 For scripts, specify logical event handlers rather than device-dependent event handlers.

Priority 3
May be satisfied, providing AAA conformance.


 * 4.2 Specify the expansion of each abbreviation or acronym in a document where it first occurs.
 * 4.3 Identify the primary natural language of a document.
 * 9.4 Create a logical tab order through links, form controls, and objects.
 * 9.5 Provide keyboard shortcuts to important links (including those in client-side image maps), form controls, and groups of form controls.
 * 10.5 Until user agents (including assistive technologies) render adjacent links distinctly, include non-link, printable characters (surrounded by spaces) between adjacent links.
 * 11.3 Provide information so that users may receive documents according to their preferences (e.g., language, content type, etc.)
 * 13.5 Provide navigation bars to highlight and give access to the navigation mechanism.
 * 13.6 Group related links, identify the group (for user agents), and, until user agents do so, provide a way to bypass the group.
 * 13.7 If search functions are provided, enable different types of searches for different skill levels and preferences.
 * 13.8 Place distinguishing information at the beginning of headings, paragraphs, lists, etc.
 * 13.9 Provide information about document collections (i.e., documents comprising multiple pages.).
 * 13.10 Provide a means to skip over multi-line ASCII art.
 * 14.2 Supplement text with graphic or auditory presentations where they will facilitate comprehension of the page.
 * 14.3 Create a style of presentation that is consistent across pages.

And if you use images and image maps (Priority 3)
 * 1.5 Until user agents render text equivalents for client-side image map links, provide redundant text links for each active region of a client-side image map.

And if you use tables (Priority 3)
 * 5.5 Provide summaries for tables.
 * 5.6 Provide abbreviations for header labels.
 * 10.3 Until user agents (including assistive technologies) render side-by-side text correctly, provide a linear text alternative (on the current page or some other) for all tables that lay out text in parallel, word-wrapped columns.

And if you use forms (Priority 3)
 * 10.4 Until user agents handle empty controls correctly, include default, place-holding characters in edit boxes and text areas.