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Re: Your thoughts....

for

From: Kornbrot, Diana
Date: Sep 6, 2012 7:02AM


Your agency probably has access to lawyers!
I am not a lawyer, so people probably shuld not follow my adice
Standards are wonderul1
Best
Diana



On 06/09/2012 13:16, "Corbett, James" < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:

Diana:

I'm smiling, my agency has adopted a 180 degree opposed approach to everything that you wrote in your message with regards to links and buttons. Ah, standards are wonderful.... if one doesn't work, then pick another. <smile>

Jim

-----Original Message-----
From: <EMAIL REMOVED> [mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> ] On Behalf Of Kornbrot, Diana
Sent: September 6, 2012 4:26 AM
To: WebAIM Discussion List
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Your thoughts....

It seems to me that 'agree' should definitely be a button to ensure legal agreement, then 'continue' is a link'with appropriate error text if button is not checked.
To me it is semantics. The continue link with agree checked is semantically and legally different to a continue link alone
Best
Diana


On 05/09/2012 18:59, "Jukka K. Korpela" < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:

2012-09-05 20:48, Corbett, James wrote:

> A matter of semantics here.

I don't see how this relates to semantics (study of meanings).

> If you have at the end of a transaction, the following: "Click to Agree",
> should it be as a link or as a button and if you are so inclined why?

This is a matter of user interface conventions and practices. I don't
see how there can be any serious doubt about this. Links are references
to resources. Buttons trigger actions.

But there are serious questions about "Click to Agree". Why would you
refer to one possible way of using a button, as opposite to using
keyboard actions for example, and why would you capitalize the verb
"agree" in the middle of a sentence? Properly reduced to "Agree", the
next question is whether this is sufficient enough. Does the context
make it absolutely clear, even to cognitively challenged people, what
one is about to agree on?

Yucca


Emeritus Professor Diana Kornbrot
email: <EMAIL REMOVED>
web: http://dianakornbrot.wordpress.com/
Work
Department of Psychology
School of Life and Medical Sciences
University of Hertfordshire
College Lane, Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL10 9AB, UK
voice: +44 (0) 170 728 4626
fax: +44 (0) 170 728 5073
Home
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Emeritus Professor Diana Kornbrot
email: <EMAIL REMOVED>
web: http://dianakornbrot.wordpress.com/
Work
Department of Psychology
School of Life and Medical Sciences
University of Hertfordshire
College Lane, Hatfield, Hertfordshire AL10 9AB, UK
voice: +44 (0) 170 728 4626
fax: +44 (0) 170 728 5073
Home
19 Elmhurst Avenue
London N2 0LT, UK
voice: +44 (0) 208 444 2081
mobile: +44 (0) 740 318 1612
fax: +44 (0) 870 706 1445