I looked at the gnupdf page (thanks Jason), and I don't see any
reference to GTK+ or ATK, so I suspect it will be inaccessible unless
someone jumps in to help them.
The good news, however, seems to be that it is under development, so now
might be a good time to approach them regarding accessibility. Anyone
care to take the lead an advocate for us?
Will
Krishnakant Mane wrote:
hi
It seams gnupdf would really be a great option because it will
probably have atk implemented by default.
happy hacking.
Krishnakant.
On 25/06/2008, Jason White <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 24, 2008 at 11:02:35PM +0530, Krishnakant Mane wrote:
well, if that's the case then some one from the evince development
team could do it.
They could do it, but it will happen more quickly if someone with an
interest
in accessibility volunteers to work on it.
Another relevant project here is http://www.gnupdf.org/ which aims to
implement PDF 1.7, the version submitted for ISO standardization. If
accessibility work is carried out in that project, it could provide support
for tagged PDF and related access features.
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