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Thread: RE: pdf forms for print or html forms for web use?

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From: Zwack, Melanie
Date: Mon, Jun 10 2002 6:35AM
Subject: RE: pdf forms for print or html forms for web use?
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Thanks for the response!

What are the steps after running the plug-in?

So far, I ran the plug-in (these Word 97 documents have not been properly
prepared for the conversion -- as you had recommended), then tried testing
these documents in Jaws with no success. Then, I go through and tag the
whole document and it works. Is this the correct way to be doing this?

Thank you **so much** for all your help with this!


-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Bohman [mailto: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = ]
Sent: Friday, June 07, 2002 5:34 PM
To: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
Subject: RE: pdf forms for print or html forms for web use?


Melanie asked:

>>Does the "Make Accessible Plug-in" work? It didn't seem to do much for
me. It seemed that tagging the document piece by piece was the only
thing that worked.

My response:

It sort of works. It creates paragraph tags fairly reliably. It often
recognizes tables. It recognizes graphics, usually, and it occasionally
recognizes headers. Complex documents don't fare too well when using
this plug-in. On the documents that I've converted, I've found that the
Make Accessible Plug-in is a decent first step, but I always, always
have to go back and fix things. Maybe the documents that you're working
with are not as easy to interpret as mine. But you're right that the
results are never optimal.

I wouldn't necessarily discourage people from using it. It's been
somewhat helpful to me. But no matter what, you have to know what to do
*after* running the plug-in. Either that, or you have to create the tags
from scratch.

By far the easiest way to create accessible PDF files is to create good,
well-formed Microsoft Office documents (with *real* headers and styles
and alternative text for images, etc.). When you do it this way, the
conversion is quite clean.

Unfortunately, Acrobat is only optimized to convert from Office, not
WordPerfect, PageMaker, or anything else.

Paul Bohman
Technology Coordinator
WebAIM (Web Accessibility in Mind)
www.webaim.org
Center for Persons with Disabilities
www.cpd.usu.edu
Utah State University
www.usu.edu




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