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Thu, 21 Feb 2002 10:40:16 -0500 |
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text/plain; charset=Windows-1252 |
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Hands-On Technolog(eye)s |
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7BIT |
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this is begun at the left and continues till the left is finished and
puts the center under that till it is finished and the right under that
till it is finished all things being equal and depending on the combo
you use. so rexources would appear way down the page in liniar fashion
from there down.
----- Original Message -----
From: "sil-nnl" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2002 10:00 AM
Subject: page layout
I am a novice to accessible design and,although I am
doing a lot of reading about accessible design from
many soures, I have many "beginner" questions that I
need clarified. Here's the first!
If screenreaders read left to right, line by line, I
don't understand the readability of accessible sites
that have what look like vertical tables on one side
of the page, or the navigation bar running vertically
down one side of the page? Ex. W3C homepage has a
table on the right side labeled "resources" or the
site map has verticle colums (general, documents,
etc.) In what order does the screenreader read this?
Thanks!
__________________________________________________
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Yahoo! Sports - Coverage of the 2002 Olympic Games
http://sports.yahoo.com
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