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Re: Accessibility in Financial Tables in HTML

for

From: Sailesh Panchang
Date: Oct 15, 2015 7:20AM


I agree with Cliff: "If sighted people are used to negative numbers
being in parentheses, then blind people of the same background should
be, too".
Screen reader users are expected to configure their AT as per their
needs and significance of the content they are reviewing.
Sailesh


On 10/15/15, _mallory < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
> It also can't hurt to state, before the table (or maybe after, but
> better before) how you denote negatives, or if the dollars are in
> millions (or that it's in dollars at all)... There was a time when
> I did not know of the (parentheses) convention for negative numbers,
> and only learned of it when I was old enough to do taxes. So it
> doesn't hurt to tell people in a quick short sentence stuff that
> might be obvious or well-known to the majority of readers anyway.
>
> If someone knows or suspects their AT won't read out a symbol,
> knowing beforehand that a symbol is being used can let people
> decide if they need to fiddle with their punctuation first. In
> any case, can't hurt to say it.
>
> This can give you more freedom inside the table itself.
>
> _mallory
>
> On Tue, Oct 13, 2015 at 02:29:03PM -0700, Don Mauck wrote:
>> From my understanding of this thread, it seems to me that each "row"
>> should have the math sign relevant to that row. I am however, only
>> thinking from a screen readers perspective and realize that there are
>> other contributing factors. What I'm not clear on, is if the intent is
>> that each row could have a different math sign and that there will be
>> columns of data related to a column heading.
>>
>>