Re: example spec text for longdesc

Henri, Aryeh

1) URL theory is adhered to as long as conformance checkers warn about 
the *possibility* of a problem only. E.g. validator.w3.org has a "Notes 
and Potential Issues" section for such issues.

2) No one has shown a URL which ends in an image file suffix and still 
*is* an accessible description. [*][#] For example Wikipedia's 
The_Scream.jpg page (about a JPEG reproduction of Munch's painting) 
only describes the image from a technical side - it does neither as a 
whole nor in any of its subsections contain an accessible description 
of the image content. [1]

3) *If* Wikipedia's The_Scream.jpg page *had* contained an accessible 
description, would it have been too much to ask that the #description 
fragment was identified? Because then, the @longdesc URL would not end 
in a image file suffix anymore.
  Example: <img longdesc="The_Scream.jpg#description src=* alt=* >

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_Scream.jpg


[*] URL shorteners could create http://example.org/longdesc.jpg.

    However, e.g. TinyURL converts '.' to '-'. If it didn't then
    it would probably increase security risks a lot ...
[#] 'png' is a language tag. As such, following could be possible:
     http://www.example.com/longdesc.html.png

-- 
Leif Halvard Silli

Received on Saturday, 26 March 2011 02:51:51 UTC