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Thread: Rich Text Format (RTF) format and accessibility?
Number of posts in this thread: 2 (In chronological order)
From: Peter Krantz
Date: Thu, Sep 27 2012 12:31PM
Subject: Rich Text Format (RTF) format and accessibility?
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Hi!
The Rich Text Format (RTF) is common in many old applications as an
output format when generating documents from e.g. a server
application. I briefly glanced through the RTF specification and tried
to understand how semantics can be expressed.
What is the current consensus of RTF with regards to accessibility?
The lack of many semantic elements compared to HTML seem to make it
difficult to provide information for assistive tools?
Regards,
Peter
From: Kornbrot, Diana
Date: Fri, Sep 28 2012 2:14AM
Subject: Re: Rich Text Format (RTF) format and accessibility?
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If one has word, then accessibility may be improved if one first saves as .docx, check that headings and so on are indeed marked as heading and only then save as pdf. As many have noted it won'y be ideal bt will probably be better tna raw rtf.
I also note that when I tried to upload an rtf file to my website, it was rejected for security reasons. This is another reason for saving as .docx before trying to interpret. No idea why rtf is less secure than .docx which can contian macros
Best
diana
On 27/09/2012 19:31, "Peter Krantz" < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = > wrote:
Hi!
The Rich Text Format (RTF) is common in many old applications as an
output format when generating documents from e.g. a server
application. I briefly glanced through the RTF specification and tried
to understand how semantics can be expressed.
What is the current consensus of RTF with regards to accessibility?
The lack of many semantic elements compared to HTML seem to make it
difficult to provide information for assistive tools?
Regards,
Peter
Emeritus Professor Diana Kornbrot
email: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
web: http://dianakornbrot.wordpress.com/
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