Microsoft Silverlight, versions 3 and greater
Silverlight managed programming model and Silverlight XAML
This technique relates to:
See User Agents Supported for general information on user agent support.
The objective of this technique is to illustrate how in certain cases,
the Silverlight automation peer system can provide an accessibility
framework Name
based on any simple text strings that
are also presented in the visible user interface as control content.
The applicability of this technique to SC 1.3.1 is that once promoted,
the Name
becomes the primary information item that
describes the user interface element to accessibiity frameworks and
assistive technologies, and the information is thus immune to any further
applications of the Silverlight style system that might change the
appearance of the visual text equivalent (styled with color, uses italic
font for rendering basis, etc.)
The applicability of this technique to SC 4.1.2 is that the default peer promotion behavior provides the Name component of Name, Role, Value. This is related to the description of the term label in SC4.1.2.
A default behavior for generating Name
for accessibility
frameworks is possible for certain peers of content controls. The content
controls that might support a default automation peer behavior include:
TextBlock
ButtonBase
derived classes that do not change
the GetNameCore
implementation. This includes the Button
class.
In order for the default promotion to work, the Content
of
the button must be set as a plain string or must contain only a TextBlock
;
any compositing such as wrapping in a Border
or
other container will disable the default promotion.
Any other ContentControl
derived class where
the Content
property contains either TextBlock
or
a text-content-only ButtonBase
implementation as
sole content.
In these cases the string that sets either Content
(for ContentControl
and ButtonBase
)
or Text
(for TextBlock
) is promoted
as the AutomationProperties.Name
for the control in
UI Automation, without any further attribution. The properties in the
UI Automation tree are reported to accessibility frameworks (UI Automation,
and MSAA through the bridge). The accessibility frameworks reports
this information to assistive technology clients.
Relying on default automation peer behavior is the preferred Silverlight technique for supplying the accessibility framework "Name" information, so long as the default peer promotion actually does produce a usable name. Using default behavior is preferred because re-using the strings that are already used in the general visual presentation is less likely to result in accessibility-specific strings being forgotten by the application author, or get decoupled from visible UI in a revision process.
For cases where there is control compositing in a control rather than
simple text, the automation peer typically cannot provide a default
simple string, and it may be the application author's responsibility
to set AutomationProperties.Name
explicitly as an
attribute in XAML, or as a property in runtime code. For details, see SL30: Using Silverlight Control Compositing and AutomationProperties.Name.
In order to use this technique effectively, application authors are expected to be following a test-based methodology towards verifying what information their application is reporting to any pertinent accessibility framework. Useful tools for this purpose include SilverlightSpy and UIAVerify. Application authors might examine their running Silverlight application on a test machine where the accessibility framework test viewers are also active. Initially, the application author might view the application at a point in the application development cycle that is prior to any effort devoted to specifically adding accessibility-related information to the application. Silverlight applications might be in this state because the initial user interface design was done in a visually oriented design tool such as Microsoft Expression Blend. Using the test-based methodology, application authors might note that certain accessibility framework properties are already populated, as a result of the mechanisms that are described in this technique. However, it is rare that ALL of the necessary accessibility information for an application can be obtained entirely from the built-in default behaviors of the automation peers. At this point, the application author may have to apply additional Silverlight techniques that provide accessibility framework information, for example SL30: Using Silverlight Control Compositing and AutomationProperties.Name.
The following example shows XAML UI only. Logic is not shown, but
would typically be added by referencing a Click
handler
from the XAML.
<Button Height="20" Width="200">Fire photon torpedoes!</Button>
The following illustration shows the UIAVerify tree view of this
simple interface. Note that the internal string "Fire photon
torpedoes!" is being peer-forwarded. This is verified by the
Properties view on the right side: the Name property value is "Fire
Photon Torpedoes", even though no programmatic Name property
or AutomationProperties.Name
has been applied to
that button that would otherwise have supplied an acccessibility
framework "Name".
This example is shown in operation in the working example of Simple Peer Forwarding.
Resources are for information purposes only, no endorsement implied.
Using a browser that supports Silverlight, open an HTML page that references a Silverlight application through an object tag. To use UI AUtomation, use Windows as the platform.
Use a verification tool that is capable of showing the full automation tree, and an object’s name text alternative as part of the tree. (For example, use UIAVerify or Silverlight Spy; see Resources links.)
Check that any element where default automation peer promotion is expected is supplying a default Name in the automation tree.
#3 is true.
If this is a sufficient technique for a success criterion, failing this test procedure does not necessarily mean that the success criterion has not been satisfied in some other way, only that this technique has not been successfully implemented and can not be used to claim conformance.
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. For important information about techniques, please see the Understanding Techniques for WCAG Success Criteria section of Understanding WCAG 2.0.