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WAI: Strategies, guidelines, resources to make the Web accessible to people with disabilities

Status -

This is an in-progress, unapproved draft. Please send any suggestions, edits, or comments to the publicly-archived list: wai-eo-editors@w3.org.

Draft About these tutorials

In these pages you'll find practical guidance and working examples of accessible web page components and interactive widgets. Each tutorial is a multi-page resource illustrating or explaining how to make sure your website is accessible.

The tutorials provide guidance on how to develop web content that meets WCAG 2.0, providing working samples of some of the WCAG2.0 Sufficient Techniques. However, neither these tutorials nor the Sufficient Techniques are the only ways to meet WCAG 2.0 Success Criteria, which are the sole measure of web accessibility.

Key stakeholders in web site development, such as developers, trainers and managers, both with and without in-depth knowledge of web accessibility should find these pages useful. They provide focused tutorials with examples of best practice and explanatory resources to inform the creation or selection of accessible web applications .

The tutorials are not exhaustive, : the range and diversity of web content and applications used in websites make it impossible to cover all situations. You To counteract this, some tutorials will deal with overarching principles, such as keyboard control, while others are on specific types of content.

Suggestions or comments on and contributions to the development of these tutorials are welcomed. In the first instance, please write to us by email to wai-eo-editors@w3.org.