Index: chrome/common/extensions/docs/server2/templates/articles/a11y.html |
diff --git a/chrome/common/extensions/docs/server2/templates/articles/a11y.html b/chrome/common/extensions/docs/server2/templates/articles/a11y.html |
new file mode 100644 |
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1a6036c5291690a596f02ca1c5b16af40e53b60b |
--- /dev/null |
+++ b/chrome/common/extensions/docs/server2/templates/articles/a11y.html |
@@ -0,0 +1,466 @@ |
+<h1>Accessibility (a11y)</h1> |
+ |
+ |
+<p> |
+When you design an extension, |
+try to make it as accessible as possible |
+to people with disabilities such as |
+visual impairment, hearing loss, and limited dexterity. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Everyone — not just people with special needs — |
+can benefit from the alternative access modes |
+that accessible extensions provide. |
+For example, keyboard shortcuts are important |
+for blind people and people with limited dexterity, |
+but they also help power users get things done |
+more quickly without using a mouse. |
+Captions and transcripts give deaf people access to audio content, |
+but they are also useful to language learners. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+People can interact with your extension in a variety of ways. |
+They might use a standard monitor, keyboard, and mouse, |
+or they might use a screen magnifier and just a keyboard. |
+Another possibility is a <em>screen reader</em>, |
+an assistive application tool that interprets |
+what's displayed onscreen |
+for a blind or visually impaired user. |
+A screen reader might speak out loud or produce Braille output. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Although you can't predict what tools people will use, |
+by following a few simple guidelines |
+you can write an extension that is |
+more likely to be accessible to more people. |
+The guidelines on this page aren't going to |
+make your extension accessible for absolutely everyone, |
+but they're a good starting point. |
+</p> |
+ |
+ |
+<h2 id="controls">Use accessible UI controls</h2> |
+ |
+<p> |
+First, use UI controls that support accessibility. |
+The easiest way to get an accessible control is to use a |
+standard HTML control. |
+If you need to build a custom control, |
+keep in mind that it's much easier |
+to make the control accessible from the beginning |
+than to go back and add accessibility support later. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="htmlcontrols">Standard controls</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Try to use standard HTML UI controls whenever possible. |
+Standard HTML controls (shown in the following figure) |
+are keyboard accessible, scale easily, |
+and are generally understood by screen readers. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<img src="{{static}}/images/a11y/standard-html-controls.png" |
+ width="550" height="350" |
+ alt="Screenshots and code for button, checkbox, radio, text, select/option, and link"> |
+ |
+ |
+<h3 id="aria">ARIA in custom controls</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+ARIA is a specification for making UI controls accessible to screen readers |
+by means of a standard set of DOM attributes. |
+These attributes provide clues to the screen reader |
+about the function and current state of controls on a web page. |
+ARIA is a |
+<a href=" http://www.w3.org/WAI/intro/aria">work in progress at the W3C</a>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Adding ARIA support to custom controls in your extension |
+involves modifying DOM elements to add attributes |
+Google Chrome uses |
+to raise events during user interaction. |
+Screen readers respond to these events |
+and describe the function of the control. |
+The DOM attributes specified by ARIA are classified into |
+<em>roles</em>, <em>states</em>, and <em>properties</em>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+The ARIA attribute <em>role</em> |
+is an indication of the control type |
+and describes the way the control should behave. |
+It is expressed with the DOM attribute <code>role</code>, |
+with a value set to one of the pre-defined ARIA role strings. |
+Because ARIA roles are static, |
+the role attribute should not change its value. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+The <a href="http://www.w3.org/WAI/PF/aria/roles">ARIA Role Specification</a> |
+holds detailed information on how to pick the correct role. |
+For example, if your extension includes a toolbar, |
+set the <code>role</code> attribute of the toolbar's DOM element as follows: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<div role="toolbar"> |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+ARIA attributes are also used to describe |
+the current state and properties of controls of a particular role. |
+A <em>state</em> is dynamic and should be updated during user interaction. |
+For example, a control with the role "checkbox" |
+could be in the states "checked" or "unchecked". |
+A <em>property</em> is not generally dynamic, |
+but is similar to a state |
+in that it expresses specific information about a control. |
+For more information on ARIA states and properties, |
+refer to the |
+<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/wai-aria/states_and_properties">W3C States and Properties specification</a>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+ |
+<p class="note"> |
+<b>Note:</b> |
+You don't have to use |
+all of the states and properties available for a particular role. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Here's an example of adding |
+the ARIA property <code>aria-activedescendant</code> |
+to the example toolbar control: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<div role="toolbar" tabindex="0" aria-activedescendant="button1"> |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+The |
+<a href="http://www.w3.org/WAI/PF/aria/states_and_properties#aria-activedescendant"><code>aria-activedescendant</code></a> |
+property specifies which child of the toolbar receives focus |
+when the toolbar receives focus. |
+In this example, the toolbar's first button |
+(which has the <code>id</code> "button1") |
+is the child that gets focus. |
+The code <code>tabindex="0"</code> |
+specifies that the toolbar |
+receives focus in document order. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Here's the complete specification for the example toolbar: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<div role="toolbar" tabindex="0" aria-activedescendant="button1"> |
+ <img src="buttoncut.png" role="button" alt="cut" id="button1"> |
+ <img src="buttoncopy.png" role="button" alt="copy" id="button2"> |
+ <img src="buttonpaste.png" role="button" alt="paste" id="button3"> |
+</div> |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Once ARIA roles, states, and properties are added to the DOM of a control, |
+Google Chrome raises the appropriate events to the screen reader. |
+Because ARIA support is still a work in progress, |
+Google Chrome might not raise an event for every ARIA property, |
+and screen readers might not recognize all of the events being raised. |
+You can find more information on ARIA support in Google Chrome in the |
+<a href="http://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/accessibility#TOC-WAI-ARIA-Support">Chromium Accessibility Design Document</a>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+For a quick tutorial on adding ARIA controls to custom controls, see |
+<a href="http://www.w3.org/2010/Talks/www2010-dsr-diy-aria/">Dave Raggett's presentation from WWW2010</a>. |
+ |
+<h3 id="focus">Focus in custom controls</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Make sure that operation and navigation controls of your extension |
+can receive keyboard focus. |
+Operation controls might include |
+buttons, trees, and list boxes. |
+Navigation controls might include tabs and menu bars. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+By default, the only elements in the HTML DOM |
+that can receive keyboard focus |
+are anchors, buttons, and form controls. |
+However, setting the HTML attribute <code>tabIndex</code> to <code>0</code> |
+places DOM elements in the default tab sequence, |
+enabling them to receive keyboard focus. |
+For example: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<em>element</em>.tabIndex = 0 |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Setting <code>tabIndex = -1</code> removes the element from the tab sequence |
+but still allows the element to receive keyboard focus programmatically. |
+Here's an example of setting keyboard focus: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<em>element</em>.focus(); |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Ensuring that your custom UI controls include keyboard support |
+is important not only for users who don't use the mouse |
+but also because screen readers use keyboard focus |
+to determine which control to describe. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h2 id="keyboard"> Support keyboard access </h2> |
+ |
+<p> |
+People should be able to use your extension |
+even if they can't or don't want to use a mouse. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="navigation"> Navigation </h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Check that the user can navigate between |
+the different parts of your extension |
+without using the mouse. |
+Also check that any popups on page actions or browser actions |
+are keyboard navigable. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p id="builtin"> |
+On Windows, you can use <b>Shift+Alt+T</b> |
+to switch the keyboard focus to the toolbar, |
+which lets you navigate to the icons of page actions and browser actions. |
+The help topic |
+<a href="http://www.google.com/support/chrome/bin/static.py?hl=en&page=guide.cs&guide=25799&from=25799&rd=1">Keyboard and mouse shortcuts</a> |
+lists all of Google Chrome's keyboard shortcuts; |
+details about toolbar navigation |
+are in the section <b>Google Chrome feature shortcuts</b>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p class="note"> |
+<b>Note:</b> |
+The Windows version of Google Chrome 6 was the first |
+to support keyboard navigation to the toolbar. |
+Support is also planned for Linux. |
+On Mac OS X, |
+access to the toolbar is provided through VoiceOver, |
+Apple's screenreader. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Make sure that it's easy to see |
+which part of the interface has keyboard focus. |
+Usually a focus outline moves around the interface, |
+but if you’re using CSS heavily this outline might be suppressed |
+or the contrast might be reduced. |
+Two examples of focus outline follow. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<img src="{{static}}/images/a11y/focus-outline-2.png" |
+ width="200" height="75" |
+ alt="A focus outline on a Search button"> |
+<br /> |
+<img src="{{static}}/images/a11y/focus-outline.png" |
+ width="400" height="40" |
+ alt="A focus outline on one of a series of links"> |
+ |
+ |
+<h3 id="shortcuts"> Shortcuts </h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Although the most common keyboard navigation strategy involves |
+using the Tab key to move focus through the extension interface, |
+that's not always the easiest or most efficient way |
+to use the interface. |
+You can make keyboard navigation easier |
+by providing explicit keyboard shortcuts. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+To implement shortcuts, |
+connect keyboard event listeners to your controls. |
+A good reference is the DHTML Style Guide Working Group’s |
+<a href="http://dev.aol.com/dhtml_style_guide">guidelines for keyboard shortcuts</a>. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+A good way to ensure discoverability of keyboard shortcuts |
+is to list them somewhere. |
+Your extension’s |
+<a href="options.html">Options page</a> |
+might be a good place to do this. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+For the example toolbar, |
+a simple JavaScript keyboard handler could look like the following. |
+Note how the ARIA property <code>aria-activedescendant</code> |
+is updated in response to user input |
+to reflect the current active toolbar button. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<head> |
+<script> |
+ function optionKeyEvent(event) { |
+ var tb = event.target; |
+ var buttonid; |
+ |
+ ENTER_KEYCODE = 13; |
+ RIGHT_KEYCODE = 39; |
+ LEFT_KEYCODE = 37; |
+ // Partial sample code for processing arrow keys. |
+ if (event.type == "keydown") { |
+ // Implement circular keyboard navigation within the toolbar buttons |
+ if (event.keyCode == ENTER_KEYCODE) { |
+ ExecuteButtonAction(getCurrentButtonID()); |
+ <em>// getCurrentButtonID defined elsewhere </em> |
+ } else if (event.keyCode == event.RIGHT_KEYCODE) { |
+ // Change the active toolbar button to the one to the right (circular). |
+ var buttonid = getNextButtonID(); |
+ <em>// getNextButtonID defined elsewhere </em> |
+ tb.setAttribute("aria-activedescendant", buttonid); |
+ } else if (event.keyCode == event.LEFT_KEYCODE) { |
+ // Change the active toolbar button to the one to the left (circular). |
+ var buttonid = getPrevButtonID(); |
+ <em>// getPrevButtonID defined elsewhere </em> |
+ tb.setAttribute("aria-activedescendant", buttonid); |
+ } else { |
+ return true; |
+ } |
+ return false; |
+ } |
+} |
+</script> |
+ |
+<div role="toolbar" tabindex="0" aria-activedescendant="button1" id="tb1" |
+ onkeydown="return optionKeyEvent(event);" |
+ onkeypress="return optionKeyEvent(event);"> |
+ <img src="buttoncut" role="button" alt="cut" id="button1"> |
+ <img src="buttoncopy" role="button" alt="copy" id="button1"> |
+ <img src="buttonpaste" role="button" alt="paste" id="button1"> |
+</div> |
+</pre> |
+ |
+ |
+<h2 id="more"> Provide accessible content </h2> |
+ |
+ |
+<p> |
+The remaining guidelines might be familiar |
+because they reflect good practices for all web content, |
+not just extensions. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="text">Text</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Evaluate your use of text in your extension. |
+Many people might find it helpful |
+if you provide a way to increase the text size within your extension. |
+If you are using keyboard shortcuts, |
+make sure that they don't interfere with |
+the zoom shortcuts built into Google Chrome. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+As an indicator of the flexibility of your UI, |
+apply the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-WCAG20-20081211/#visual-audio-contrast-scale">200% test</a>. |
+If you increase the text size or page zoom 200%, |
+is your extension still usable? |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Also, avoid baking text into images: |
+users cannot modify the size of text displayed as an image, |
+and screenreaders cannot interpret images. |
+Consider using a web font instead, |
+such as one of the fonts collected in the |
+<a href="http://code.google.com/apis/webfonts/">Google Font API</a>. |
+Text styled in a web font is searchable, |
+scales to different sizes, |
+and is accessible to people using screen readers. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="colors">Colors</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Check that there is sufficient contrast between |
+background color and foreground/text color in your extension. |
+<a href="http://snook.ca/technical/colour_contrast/colour.html">This contrast checking tool</a> |
+checks whether your background and foreground colors |
+provide appropriate contrast. |
+If you’re developing in a Windows environment, |
+you can also enable High Contrast Mode |
+to check the contrast of your extension. |
+When evaluating contrast, |
+verify that every part of your extension that relies on |
+color or graphics to convey information is clearly visible. |
+For specific images, you can use a tool such as the |
+<a href="http://www.vischeck.com/vischeck/">Vischeck simulation tool</a> |
+to see what an image looks like in various forms of color deficiency. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+You might consider offering different color themes, |
+or giving the user the ability to customize the color scheme |
+for better contrast. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="sound">Sound</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+If your extension relies upon sound or video to convey information, |
+ensure that captions or a transcript are available. |
+See the |
+<a href="http://www.dcmp.org/ciy/">Described and Captioned Media Program guidelines</a> |
+for more information on captions. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<h3 id="images">Images</h3> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Provide informative alt text for your images. |
+For example: |
+</p> |
+ |
+<pre> |
+<img src="img.jpg" alt="The logo for the extension"> |
+</pre> |
+ |
+<p> |
+Use the alt text to state the purpose of the image |
+rather than as a literal description of the contents of an image. |
+Spacer images or purely decorative images |
+should have blank ("") alt text |
+or be removed from the HTML entirely and placed in the CSS. |
+</p> |
+ |
+<p> |
+If you must use text in an image, |
+include the image text in the alt text. |
+A good resource to refer to is the |
+<a href="http://www.webaim.org/techniques/alttext/">WebAIM article on appropriate alt text</a>. |
+ |
+<h2 id="examples">Examples</h2> |
+ |
+<p> |
+For an example that implements keyboard navigation and ARIA properties, see |
+<a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/news_a11y/">examples/extensions/news_a11y</a> |
+(compare it to |
+<a href="http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/chrome/common/extensions/docs/examples/extensions/news/">examples/extensions/news</a>). |
+For more examples and for help in viewing the source code, |
+see <a href="samples.html">Samples</a>. |