Public Sector Accessibility Regulations 2018
Public Sector Accessibility Regulations 2018
- Features that a defined for accessibility include, subtitles, which can be used by anyone especially those who have impaired hearing. Enlarged text which is used for people who have impaired eyesight.
- Some of the situations that are listed in the guidelines include a video not having subtitles, having poor colour contrast making it hard to see things in certain situations, not having clear ways to navigate a website.
- Some examples of providing accessibility features would be being able to enlarge texts, being able to dub different languages, and being able to have subtitles.
Test Yourself (WCAG)
- Two of the principles of the WCAG include making things perceivable (so providing things like text for images so screen readers can work, and make content able to work on various displays). Another principle is operable (making sure that a website can be use by a keyboard and mouse and making sure that the website doesn’t trigger things like seizures).
- The three standards defined by the WCAG include basic accessibility, intermediate accessibility and enhanced accessibility.
- According to the WCAG, web content refers to things that people can get access to on a web page, and some of the components include, text, images, audio and video, files and documents, and much more.
- The four principles outlined in the WCAG 2.1 are perceivable, operable, understandable and robust.
Two areas that must be included in the accessibility statement are compliance information and how they are doing so and also accessibility features and limitations
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