List the three types of guidance in Techniques for WCAG 2.0
True or false:
Techniques are the basis for determining WCAG 2.0 conformance?
False
Techniques are informative—that means they are not required. The basis for determining conformance to WCAG 2.0 is the success criteria from the WCAG 2.0 standard—not the techniques.
True or false:
Sufficient techniques are reliable ways to meet the success criteria?
True
True or False:
Advisory techniques are suggested ways to improve accessibility. They are often very helpful to some users, and may be the only way that some users can access some types of content.
True
Advisory techniques are not designated as sufficient techniques for various reasons such as:
True or false
Failures are things that cause accessibility barriers and fail specific success criteria.
True
Failures are things that cause accessibility barriers and fail specific success criteria. The documented failures are useful for:
Content that has a failure does not meet WCAG success criteria, unless an alternate version is provided without the failure.
True or False
General techniques describe basic practices that apply to all technologies. Technology-specific techniques apply to a specific technology.
True
Some success criteria do not have technology-specific techniques and are covered only with general techniques. Therefore, both the general techniques and the relevant technology-specific techniques should be considered.
Publication of techniques for a specific technology does not imply that the technology can be used in all situations to create content that meets WCAG 2.0 success criteria and conformance requirements. Developers need to be aware of the limitations of specific technologies and provide content in a way that is accessible to people with disabilities.
True or False
In addition to techniques, there are other ways to meet WCAG success criteria. W3C’s techniques are not comprehensive and may not cover newer technologies and situations.
True
In addition to the techniques in W3C’s Techniques for WCAG 2.0 document, there are other ways to meet WCAG success criteria. W3C’s techniques are not comprehensive and may not cover newer technologies and situations.
Web content does not have to use W3C’s published techniques in order to conform to WCAG 2.0. (See also Techniques are Informative above.)
Content authors can develop different techniques. For example, an author could develop a technique for HTML5, WAI-ARIA, or other new technology. Other organizations may develop sets of techniques to meet WCAG 2.0 success criteria.
all of the WCAG 2.0 conformance requirements are met.
Todo: Testing Techniques
Each technique has tests that help:
The tests are only for a technique, they are not tests for conformance to WCAG success criteria.
Thus while the techniques are useful for evaluating content, evaluations must go beyond just checking the sufficient technique tests in order to evaluate how content conforms to WCAG success criteria.
Failures are particularly useful for evaluations because they do indicate non-conformance (unless an alternate version is provided without the failure).
True or false
If the User Agent and Assistive Technology Support Notes sections of individual techniques require users to have a specific browser or assistive technology in order for the technique to be accessibility-supported, then the criterion does not need to be succcessful to pass.
False
Authors should test techniques with the user agents and assistive technologies currently available to their users as notes may not be updated or accurate.