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Re: Emphasized Text in PDFs

for

From: David Ashleydale
Date: Oct 22, 2013 2:11PM


Hi, Lucy and Patrick

I think you're establishing that what I'm trying to do is low priority.
That's very important to know.

But I would still like to know the answer to my question if there's anyone
out there that knows.

Thanks!
David

On Tuesday, October 22, 2013, Lucy Greco wrote:

> David and Patrick I do know that an expert user can find that information
> but I only think at the beginner and or intermediate user level when
> thinking of creating a web site. A large majority of users will not know
> how to ask for that information and many many more would not know to ask
> for that kind of information. Yes I can check the characteristics of a
> letter or word on a page but would I? know! what would be the point. the
> last time I used that feature in jaws was to read a sadocu screen and
> needed to tell witch numbers were fixed. As it was that still did not
> work as well as it should. Lucy
>
>
> l
>
> Lucia Greco
> Web Access Analyst
> IST-Campus Technology Services
> University of California, Berkeley
> (510) 289-6008 skype: lucia1-greco
> http://webaccess.berkeley.edu
> Follow me on twitter @accessaces
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: <EMAIL REMOVED> <javascript:;>
> [mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> <javascript:;>] On Behalf Of
> David
> Ashleydale
> Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2013 12:35 PM
> To: WebAIM Discussion List
> Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Emphasized Text in PDFs
>
> Hi Lucy,
>
> I know that screen readers and other AT don't announce emphasized text by
> default, but I believe there are ways to investigate it if you want. But
> this only works if strong or em are used as opposed to b or i in HTML, I
> believe. I was just trying to find out if PDF authors need to do anything
> special to emphasized words in order for AT users to be able to
> investigate
> it if they want.
>
> Thanks,
> David
>
> On Tuesday, October 22, 2013, Lucy Greco wrote:
>
> > Hello:
> > Even though the html supports the strong and ... screen readers and or
> > other AT do not recognize it in any way and it never comes over to us.
> >
> > Lucia Greco
> > Web Access Analyst
> > IST-Campus Technology Services
> > University of California, Berkeley
> > (510) 289-6008 skype: lucia1-greco
> > http://webaccess.berkeley.edu
> > Follow me on twitter @accessaces
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: <EMAIL REMOVED> <javascript:;> <javascript:;>
> > [mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> <javascript:;><javascript:;>] On Behalf
> Of
> > David
> > Ashleydale
> > Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2013 12:09 PM
> > To: WebAIM Discussion List
> > Subject: [WebAIM] Emphasized Text in PDFs
> >
> > I've been doing some research trying to figure out if there's anything
> > additional that PDF authors need to do in order to expose bold or
> > italicized text to assistive technology users. I specifically mean text
> > that is meant to be emphasized.
> >
> > I'm coming up with blanks. It's looking to me like PDFs are different
> from
> > HTML in this regard in that in HTML, page authors are expected to use
> > <strong> and <em> instead of <b> and <i>. I was expecting to find that
> PDF
> > authors are supposed to add an emphasis "tag" or attribute to emphasized
> > words, but I'm finding no such thing.
> >
> > Is it true that if text in a PDF is bold or italicized for emphasis,
> there
> > is nothing additional that the PDF author needs to do using Acrobat Pro?
> > No additional tags, attributes, etc.?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > David
> > > > > > messages to <EMAIL REMOVED> <javascript:;> <javascript:;>
> > > > > > > >
> > > > > > >