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Re: Background changing

for

From: Chaals is Charles McCathie Nevile
Date: May 23, 2017 6:50AM


Yep. It should stop, and it should be easy to stop it. Many people who
would not identify as "cognitively disabled" have observable problems
dealing with stuff where the background moves.

If the content is relevant to anything, it should be clear how to move
through the carousel.

As a side note - since I just hit yet another broken site, is the
contrast still OK when the font-size is doubled, as arguably required by
WCAG, or set to 72pt as required by actual people?

cheers

On 23/05/17 11:57, Veronika Jermolina wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> My take on SC 2.2.2 Pause stop hide is that if there's movement (lasting
> longer than 5 seconds), there must be a mechanism to stop it.
> https://www.w3.org/TR/UNDERSTANDING-WCAG20/time-limits-pause.html
>
> It may sound quite harsh and most carousels would indeed fail this.
>
> However, from experience of observing people use websites with movement,
> this SC is actually based on a real need. People with dyslexia or cognitive
> impairments may not be able to read the text when there is movement on the
> page. I've seen people scroll any moving elements completely out of view
> before they could read it. I would therefore argue that movement on the
> page prevents people from perceiving content, which breaks one of four core
> WCAG 2.0 principles.
>
> So your concerns are valid I would say.
>
> Thanks,
> Vero
>
>
> On 23 May 2017 at 09:01, Karl Brown < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
>
>> 2.2.2 <https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/#time-limits-pause> *might *come into
>> play, even though the images are decorative. Because they're changing and
>> give some form of information* I'd certainly want to be able to pause it.
>>
>> I say information*, because it's more in keeping with how a brand wants to
>> be seen. If the images are totally decorative (could be swapped out with no
>> loss of understanding from the user) then it'll be harder to argue from a
>> WCAG perspective.
>>
>> Away from the guidelines, you're right. People with some cognitive issues
>> may wonder what's going on and become distressed. And users who zoom in may
>> end up having issues reading the text as the text gets bigger and spills
>> over more of the image, which could lead into a failure for colour
>> contrast.
>>
>> If the company are using a CMS, there's one other thing they should
>> consider for accessibility. A typical CMS user doesn't understand web
>> accessibility, nor does the average marketing professional, so colour
>> contrast is very likely to fail over time as users switch the images for
>> new ones. The only way around that is to code something like a block
>> background colour behind the text, which'll defeat the usual purpose of
>> text over images.
>>
>> I'd be interested to hear what everyone else thinks?
>>
>> On Mon, May 22, 2017 at 9:15 PM, Gosia Wheeler < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I would like to hear your accessibility feedback on the following
>> scenario:
>>> I'm testing a desktop website with static text but the background image
>> is
>>> changing. There are four different decorative images used for the
>>> background, shifting from one to the other every 9 seconds. There is
>>> sufficient contrast between the foreground text and the background image.
>>> Do you think it needs a Play/Pause button, or should the image rotation
>>> stop after a certain number of cycles, or maybe it is fine as is?
>>>
>>> I'm concerned that for people with cognitive disabilities and those with
>>> low vision that magnify the screen, the background changing will be too
>>> confusing and they will not be able to tell if the images bring any value
>>> to the website experience or not.
>>> Please share your feedback.
>>>
>>> >>> >>> >>> >>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Karl Brown
>> Twitter: @kbdevelops
>> Skype: kbdevelopment
>>
>> Professional Certificate Web Accessibility Compliance (Distinction),
>> University of South Australia, 2015
>> >> >> >> >>
> > > > --
Charles McCathie Nevile - standards - Yandex
<EMAIL REMOVED> - Find more at http://yandex.com