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Re: Identifying focus rectangles

for

From: mhysnm1964@gmail.com
Date: Feb 6, 2019 5:18PM


Jonathan

Thanks for the confirmation. Would be nice if the accessibility tree
contained this information.

-----Original Message-----
From: WebAIM-Forum < <EMAIL REMOVED> > On Behalf Of
Jonathan Cohn
Sent: Thursday, 7 February 2019 7:24 AM
To: WebAIM Discussion List < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Identifying focus rectangles

I believe this is essentially the same answer I got when I asked on the BATS
(Blind Accessibility Testing) group a year ago. One can certainly look to
ensure that focus rectangles have not been disabled in the CSS, but it is
near impossible to confirm they exist and have the proper color contrast
ratios.

Jonathan Cohn

> On Feb 6, 2019, at 4:17 AM, Patrick H. Lauke < <EMAIL REMOVED> >
wrote:
>
> On 06/02/2019 07:24, <EMAIL REMOVED> wrote:
>
>> For a screen reader user, how can they detect focus rectangles when
>> the keyboard focus is on an element? Is this an requirement to check
>> the CSS and possibly the Javascript? Is there any other methods?
>
> I'd say that this is one of those SCs that are very difficult, if not
outright impossible, to test fully for a non-sighted user (as there can be
so many variations in how the element is being styled, and the styling may
even be placed programmatically on a parent/ancestor element, requiring you
to analyse potentially the whole DOM branch going all the way to the root of
the page).
>
> P
> --
> Patrick H. Lauke
>
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