spanisheyes wrote: > 2006/6/16, Thierry Koblentz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> I wrote this with the help of a few GAWDS [1] members: >> http://www.tjkdesign.com/articles/standard_accessibility_statement.asp >> >> [1] www.gawds.org > > Hi Thierry, > I read on that page : > "All pages on this site use structured semantic markup. H2 tags are > used for main titles, H3 tags for subtitles."
Hi R.B., Then it goes: "For example, on this page, JAWS users can skip to the next section within the accessibility statement by pressing ALT+INSERT+3. Opera users can skip sections by using "S" and "W" to cycle forwards and backwards respectively through headings." > H1 tags are missing. Is there a particular reason for this? This is the way I see this (if I'm wrong please correct me): There should be only one h1 per document and this heading is easily reachable by users of AD (in Jaws "ALT+INSERT+HOME" moves to the first heading in the document). The statement doesn't mean the page doesn't use h1. IMO, "All pages on this site use structured semantic markup" implies h1 are used. It is to tell users what h2 and h3 are used for so they know what they are cycling through. It is about skipping to headings of same level (rather than using "CTRL+INSERT+ENTER" to move from one heading to the next) so I thought there was no reason/need to mention h1 in there. --- Regards, Thierry | www.TJKDesign.com ****************************************************** The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm for some hints on posting to the list & getting help ******************************************************
