User: Graham87/Accessibility wishlist

(make proper HTML list ... rofl!)
(→‎Vector-related: the two problems I listed were basically the same thing, and they've been fixed now)
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Here is my wishlist for Wikipedia accessibility:
Here is my wishlist for Wikipedia accessibility:
==Vector-related==
I use [[Wikipedia:User:Graham87 vector|User:Graham87 vector]] as a test account for the Vector skin on Wikipedia; otherwise I use the Monobook skin. The Vector-related problems with the highest priority that are already noted at [http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Accessibility the page about accessibility on MediaWiki.org] are probably:
*[https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23428 bug 23428: Headers of collapsible (sub)menus in sidebar not accesible via keyboard]
*[https://bugzilla.wikimedia.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24298 Bug 24298 – Vector skin's dropdown action list troubles users without mice] - has the supposed fix gone live to Wikipedia yet?


==Other==
==Other==

Revision as of 12:57, 15 February 2013

Here is my wishlist for Wikipedia accessibility:

Other

  • Fix bug 11555, so that heading tags don't contain the word "edit"; this causes a screen reader user who is navigating by headings to constantly hear the word "edit" as part of the heading title.
  • Make alt text handling more sane so that screen reader users don't have to hear the file name of images all the time. See bug 24586.
  • At the moment, when a user writes a list in MediaWiki and separates each item by more than one line break, they will unknowingly generate multiple HTML lists. For example, a screen reader would read such a list like this: "list of 1 item, A, list end; list of 1 item, b, list end; list of 1 item, C, list end" instead of "list of 3 items, a, b, c, list end". See the relevant text about accessibility of lists in Wikipedia.
  • As far as I know, the licensing tutorial for the Commons upload wizard is presently a comic, which is completely inaccessible to screen reader users. It would be nice if there was a version of the tutorial in a format more accessible to the blind. Perhaps an audio/video presentation? 
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