Ideally they should warn or give some indication that they're going to open
in a new window.
I know the way i personally browse sites means I hate it when they open
things in new windows. If i want new windows, I hold control down as I
click, or middle click, or whatever. It's default functionalit
I'm also bruised by new windows I didn't want and links which apparently
didn't work because they refreshed an existing window below the current
one.
I second the line of argumentation against new windows. Even if screen
readers can deal with them better now, I'd like to keep the user in
control o
On Thu, 12 Mar 2009, michael.brocking...@bt.com wrote:
I believe a best practice is for your web pages to use the same TARGET
attribute value so links from your page basically are updating the
same
"new" window and not creating a new window for every link followed
from your website.
I wou
michael.brocking...@bt.com wrote:
I would have to disagree with that. If the user actually _is_ aware that
they are about to open a new window, then does the same again somewhere
else on the page, or on another page, then they are going to be very
confused to discover that only one window has ope
> I believe a best practice is for your web pages to use the same TARGET
> attribute value so links from your page basically are updating the
same
> "new" window and not creating a new window for every link followed
> from your website.
>
> Jon
I would have to disagree with that. If the user a
> Jon Gunderson
> I think this requirement is a little out dated, screen readers today
do a good job of telling people that a new window is open.
But, as discussed, the requirement actually doesn't concern itself
directly with links popping up new windows, but more things like the
page all of a s
I think this requirement is a little out dated, screen readers today
do a good job of telling people that a new window is open.
I think the main concern is window pollution, if links are opening a
lot of "new" windows it can be difficult for people with some types of
disabilities to be aware of an
t all, regardless of what WCAG
2.0 may or may not say.
Steve
-Original Message-
From: li...@webstandardsgroup.org [mailto:li...@webstandardsgroup.org] On
Behalf Of Jon Gunderson
Sent: 12 March 2009 14:23
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] a WCAG 2.0 question
I think
No contradiction.
"WCAG 2.0 Recommendation is the normative document."
"Not all techniques can be used or would be effective in all situations."
Therefore, any particular TECHNIQUE is not REQUIRED for conformance.
That is to say, if you have some other technique that meets the WCAG
recommenda
hi glenda,
"Changing the setting of any user interface component is changing some
state in the control that will persist when the user is no longer
interacting with it. So checking a checkbox or entering text into a
text field changes its setting, but activating a link or a button does
not."
http:
Glen Wallis wrote:
I am interested to know whether the people on this list consider opening
a new window without alerting the user to be a failure to conform to
Success Criterion 3.2.2 of WCAG 2.0.
*3.2.2 On Input:* Changing the setting of any user interface component
does not automatically
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