| Title | Sequence defined by XHTML (two paragraphs) |
|---|---|
| Description | XHTML page with content arranged in two paragraphs. |
| Creator | BenToWeb (johannes.koch@…) |
| Rights | Copyright BenToWeb 2005-2007 |
| Language | English |
| Date | 2005-08-16 |
| Status | accepted QA |
Technologies are markup languages or data formats. If the technology is a markup language, “features” refers to elements and attributes.
XHTML™ 1.0 The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (Second Edition)
This is a test for the reading order of content: an assistive technology should be able to provide an alternative presentation of content while preserving the reading order needed to perceive meaning. The test file uses plain markup without styling or scripts, so the reading order is not changed in any way.
Accessibility expert.
“Rules” refer to success criteria in WCAG 2.0, checkpoints in WCAG 1.0 and similar requirements.
The test case passes the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20060427/guidelines.html#content-structure-separation-sequence.
The user's assistive technology can programatically determine the sequence of content.
The sequence of content (XHTML) can be determined programatically.
This test case maps to technique G57: Ordering the content in a meaningful sequence (http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-TECHS-20060427/Overview.html#G57).
The test case passes the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20050630/#content-structure-separation-sequence.
The sequence can be determined programatically.
The sequence of content (XHTML) can be determined programatically.