| Title | Change of focus when a link loses the focus (onblur) |
|---|---|
| Description | Document containing three links; when the user moves focus from the first link the third (not the second) gets focus. |
| Creator | BenToWeb (johannes.koch@…) |
| Rights | Copyright BenToWeb 2005-2007 |
| Language | English |
| Date | 2005-08-29 |
| 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)
Feature: a
(namespace: http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml)
.
Technical specification: http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224/interact/scripts.html#adef-onblur.
Standard ECMA-262 : ECMAScript Language Specification, 3rd edition (December 1999)
The test is intended to fail because the change of focus was not expected.
The browser must be JavaScript-enabled.
Accessibility expert.
“Rules” refer to success criteria in WCAG 2.0, checkpoints in WCAG 1.0 and similar requirements.
The test case fails the following success criterion at line 9, column 111: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20060427/guidelines.html#consistent-behavior-no-extreme-changes-context.
The user initiated the change of context, but did not expect it to be connected to the user's action.
(In Opera 9, the focus seems to get "stuck" on the third link.)
The test case fails the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20060427/guidelines.html#navigation-mechanisms-focus.
The normal tabbing order and the reverse tabbing order are not the same, and this can make it difficult to build a consistent mental model of the content.
The test case passes the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20050630/#consistent-behavior-no-extreme-changes-context.
The user initiated the change of context.
The user moved the focus to another link, which initiated a change of focus.