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EPUB Accessibility Techniques defines discovery and content accessibility requirements for EPUB® Publications.
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This document, EPUB Accessibility Techniques, provides guidance on how to meet the [EPUB-A11Y-11] discovery and accessibility requirements for EPUB Publications.
This document does not cover techniques and best practices already addressed in [WCAG2] and [WAI-ARIA-1.1] for which no substantive differences in application exist.
This document uses the following terminology defined in EPUB 3 [EPUB-3]:
In addition, it uses the definition of assistive technology as defined in [WCAG2].
An assistive technology is not always a separate application from a Reading System. Reading Systems often integrate features of standalone assistive technologies, such as text-to-speech playback.
The accessibility techniques described in this document are advisory in nature. They are intended to help EPUB Creators create EPUB Publications that conform to the requirements in [EPUB-A11Y-11], but they are not all applicable in all situations and there may be other ways to meet the requirements of that specification. As a result, this document should not be read as providing prescriptive requirements.
These techniques also do not address issues in digital publishing for which no universally accessible solutions exist. The W3C's Digital Publishing Interest Group has published a note that outlines many of these issues [DPUB-Accessibility]. As solutions become available, they will be incorporated into the appropriate document, whether this one or one it refers to.
If EPUB Creators encounter issues that are not covered in these or related techniques, they are encouraged to report the issue to the appropriate community for guidance on how to meet accessibility standards. The W3C Web Accessibility Interest Group has a public mailing list where issues meeting [WCAG2] and [WAI-ARIA-1.1] requirements can be raised. The W3C Publishing Community Group issue tracker can be used to ask for support implementing EPUB-specific requirements and the EPUB 3 Working Group's issue tracker to report issues with this document.
An access mode is defined as a "human sense perceptual system or cognitive faculty through which a user may process or perceive the content of a digital resource." [ISO24751-3] For example, if an EPUB Publication contains images and video, visual perception is required to consume the content exactly as it was created.
There are four access modes that are typically specified for EPUB Publications:
textual — the publication contains text content (headings, paragraphs, etc.).
visual — the publication contains visual content such as images, graphics, diagrams, animations, and video.
auditory — the publication contains auditory content such as standalone audio clips and audio soundtracks for video content.
tactile — the publication contains tactile content such as embedded braille and tactile diagrams.
For a user to determine whether an EPUB Publication is suitable for their needs, they need to know
which of these access modes are required to consume the content. List all applicable access modes in
the [schema-org] accessMode
property,
repeating the property for each applicable mode.
Note that the access modes of the content do not reflect any adaptations that have been provided. For example, if a comic book also includes alternative text for each image, it does not have a textual access mode. See the following section on sufficient access modes for how to indicate that the available adaptations allow the content to be consumed in another mode.
Refer to The
accessMode
Property [A11Y-DISCOV-VOCAB] for more information about this
property and its values.
The access modes sufficient to consume an EPUB Publication express a broader picture of the potential usability than do the basic access modes. Where the basic access modes identify the default nature of the media used in the publication, sufficient access modes identify which modes, or sets of modes, a user requires to read the publication. Sufficient access modes account for the affordances and adaptations that have been provided, allowing a user to determine whether the content will be usable regardless of its default nature.
Sufficient access modes are identified in the [schema-org] accessModeSufficient
property.
Repeat the property for each set of sufficient access modes.
For example, consider an EPUB Publication that contains graphics and charts, as well as descriptions for all these images. The publication has both textual and visual content, so the EPUB Creator will include the following metadata entries to indicate this:
<meta
property="schema:accessMode">
textual
</meta>
<meta
property="schema:accessMode">
visual
</meta>
This metadata does not make clear whether a textual access mode is sufficient to read the entire publication, or whether a visual one is, only that two modes are required by default. This discrepancy is why sufficiency is also important to know.
The first set of sufficiency metadata the EPUB Creator inputs will establish the textual and visual requirement:
<meta
property="schema:accessModeSufficient">
textual,visual
</meta>
The order in which the access modes are listed is not important. The only requirement is that they be separated by commas.
Since the EPUB Creator has also included descriptions for all the images, the EPUB Creator can also indicate that a purely textual access mode is sufficient to read the content:
<meta
property="schema:accessModeSufficient">
textual
</meta>
Without this metadata, users would not have known that they could read the publication only via its text content.
A sufficient access mode of "visual
" is not provided as the content is not entirely
image-based. Textual content is considered a separate mode as it can be read both visually and
aurally (text-to-speech). Photo books without text would be examples of works with a purely
visual sufficient access mode.
The full set of entries in this example is as follows:
<meta
property="schema:accessMode">
textual
</meta>
<meta
property="schema:accessMode">
visual
</meta>
<meta
property="schema:accessModeSufficient">
textual,visual
</meta>
<meta
property="schema:accessModeSufficient">
textual
</meta>
Note that sufficiency of access is often a subjective determination of the EPUB Creator based on their understanding of what information is essential to comprehending the text. Some information loss occurs by not being able to view a video, for example, but the EPUB Creator might regard the visual or auditory losses as inconsequential if a transcript provides all the necessary information to understand the concepts being conveyed.
Refer to The
accessModeSufficient
Property [A11Y-DISCOV-VOCAB] for more information
about this property and its values.
The accessModeSufficient
property, as defined in [schema-org], allows more
complicated expressions than can be represented in the EPUB 2 or 3 Package Document (e.g.,
definition of lists of values and inclusion of a human-readable description). A future version
of EPUB might allow for richer metadata, but the basic expression shown in this section is
sufficient for discovery purposes.
Identifying all the accessibility features and adaptations included in an EPUB Publication allows users to determine whether the content is usable at a more fine-grained level than the access modes do.
For example, a math textbook might have a textual access mode, but that alone does not indicate whether MathML markup is available. Whether a visual work only provides alternative text or whether it includes extended descriptions is also important to know when gauging its usability.
Accessibility features are identified in the [schema-org] accessibilityFeature
property.
Repeat this property for each feature.
The EPUB format requires that some accessibility features will always be present (e.g., a table of contents). Do not exclude these features from the accessibility metadata, as users typically are not aware what features are built into a format. Failing to include entries will reduce the discoverability of the publication when users search for specific features.
Refer to The
accessibilityFeature
Property [A11Y-DISCOV-VOCAB] for more information
about this property and its values.
There are three widely recognized hazards that can affect readers of digital content:
flashing — if a resource flashes more than three times a second, it can cause seizures (e.g., videos and animations). See also [WCAG2] Guideline 2.3.
motion simulation — if a resource simulates motion, it can cause a user to become nauseated
(e.g., a video game drawn on the [HTML] canvas
element or parallax scrolling with CSS).
sound — certain sound patterns, such as ringing and buzzing, can cause seizures, while loud or sudden changes in volume can also negatively affect users.
EPUB Creators have to report whether their EPUB Publications contain resources that present any of these hazards to users, as they can have real physical effects.
What precisely constitutes a sound hazard, and how to test for these hazards, is not standardized as of publication of this document. EPUB Creators will have to use their discretion on when to specify a sound hazard until additional guidance is developed. This technique will be updated whenever there is more clarity on this issue.
Hazards are identified in the [schema-org] accessibilityHazard
property. Repeat this property for each hazard.
Unlike other accessibility properties, the presence of hazards can be expressed both positively and negatively. This design decision was made because users most often search for content that is free from hazards that affect them, but also want to know what dangers are present in any publications they discover.
Do not skip reporting hazards just because an EPUB Publication does not contain any content that
could present risks. Users cannot infer a meaning when no metadata is present. The value
"none
" can be used in such cases instead of repeating each non-hazard.
If an EPUB Publication contains a hazard, provide additional information about its source and nature in the accessibility summary.
If hazards cannot be definitively determined, report the value "unknown
".
Refer to The
accessibilityHazard
Property [A11Y-DISCOV-VOCAB] for more information
about this property and its values.
An accessibility summary provides a brief, human-readable description of the accessibility characteristics of an EPUB Publication, or lack thereof.
If an EPUB Publication does not meet the requirements for content accessibility in [EPUB-A11Y-11], the reason(s) it fails should be noted in the summary.
An accessibility summary is provided using the [schema-org] accessibilitySummary
property.
Do not repeat this property unless it contains the summary in another language. In the case of
multiple summaries, use the xml:lang
attribute to differentiate the language.
Refer to The
accessibilitySummary
Property [A11Y-DISCOV-VOCAB] for more information
about this property.
The use of the schema:accesibilityAPI
property is no longer necessary for EPUB
Publications. EPUB Creators are not responsible for the interaction between Reading Systems and the
underlying platform APIs.
Meeting the requirements of [WCAG2] is a better measure of the accessibility of scripting, as this property does not differentiate between ARIA markup used for document structure or for identifying controls.
The use of the schema:accesibilityControl
property is no longer necessary for EPUB
Publications. This property does not differentiate issues arising from the Reading System interface
from those in the underlying content, which has led to confusion about its use.
Meeting the requirements of [WCAG2] will mitigate most known issues with the content and is sufficient for authoring purposes.
The following examples show the metadata that would be added to an EPUB Publication that has textual and visual access modes, is sufficient for reading by text, contains alternative text and MathML markup, and has a flashing hazard.
Techniques for meeting the requirements of the [WCAG2] are defined in Techniques for WCAG. This document does not repeat those techniques.
In general, the differences between the application of WCAG techniques to web pages and their application to EPUB Content Documents is minimal, but the following sections outline some key differences.
One point to note is that the WCAG techniques cover a greater range of technologies and content types than are typically found in an EPUB Publication, so many are not applicable.
The following sets of techniques are the most applicable to EPUB Content Documents:
Other techniques will apply depending on the technologies used (e.g., a [SWF] video in EPUB 2) or any alternative formats embedded in the EPUB Publication (e.g., a PDF form).
EPUB Creators not familiar with the [WCAG2] may find the number of techniques daunting, as they are intended to provide broad coverage of possible solutions.
Assistance applying these techniques to EPUB Content Documents is available from the following sources:
DAISY Accessible Publishing Knowledge Base — compendium of best practices by content type, with links to the applicable WCAG techniques.
BISG Quickstart Guide to Accessible Publishing — includes a set of top practices for making content accessible.
[WCAG2] Success Criterion 1.3.2 specifies that each web page have a meaningful order (i.e., that the visual presentation of the content match the underlying markup).
As EPUB allows two documents to be rendered together in a synthetic spread [EPUB-3], the order of content within a single document cannot always be evaluated in isolation. Content may span visually from one document to the next. For example, a sidebar might span the bottom of two pages.
Ordering each document separately by the visual display will lead to users of assistive technologies encountering gaps between the start and end of the spanned text. If the markup cannot be arranged to provide a more logical reading experience (e.g., the beginning of the spanned content at the end of the first page followed by the conclusion at the start of the next), another means of satisfying this criteria will be necessary to avoid failure (e.g., a hyperlink could be provided to allow a user to jump from the break point on the first page to the continuation on the next).
[WCAG2] Success Criterion 2.4.5 requires there be more than one way to locate a web page within a set of web pages. By default, EPUB Publications meet this WCAG requirement so long as EPUB Creators follow the EPUB requirements to include all EPUB Content Documents in the spine and ensure access to all non-linear documents [EPUB-3].
The reason an EPUB Publication passes by meeting these requirements has to do with differences in how a user interacts with the set of documents in an EPUB Publication. In particular, although an EPUB Publication typically consists of many Content Documents, Reading Systems automatically provide the ability for the user to move seamlessly from one document to the next, so long as they are listed in the spine [EPUB-3]. To the user, an EPUB Publication is a single document they have complete access to, not a set of disconnected pages that they need links to move through.
The required table of contents provides a second method to access the major headings of the publication. The user can jump to any heading and continue to navigate from there, regardless of how the publication is chunked.
Following these two requirements therefore satisfies the need for multiple ways to access the content. Reading Systems also typically provide search capabilities, something the EPUB Creator cannot provide, so users also have a third option available in most cases.
Although EPUB Creators only need to follow EPUB requirements to meet this criterion, they are still encouraged to provide additional methods to improve access beyond the minimum. Some suggestions include:
adding at least one link to every Content Document in the spine to the table of contents, when feasible;
adding an index to locate major topics; and
adding additional navigation aids to the EPUB Navigation Document (e.g., lists of figures and tables).
A common question about the EPUB table of contents is what completeness it needs to have with respect to the headings of the publication. Although the obvious answer seems like it should be a simple aggregation of all headings for all sections, practically there are several usability challenges to this approach.
Factors such as device screen sizes can make the table of contents for publications with a deep hierarchy of headings unreadable, so EPUB Creators will trim headings below a certain depth to improve the readability. Further, Reading Systems do not always provide structured access to the headings in the table of contents, or provide shortcuts to navigate the links. The result is that users have to listen to each link one at a time to find where they want to go, a tedious and time-consuming process.
Although it is expected that Reading Systems will improve access to the table of contents as accessibility support for EPUB evolves — making complete tables of contents usable by everyone — there are legitimate usability reasons why they are not provided now.
When EPUB Creators choose not to provide links to all the headings, however, they should optimize the linking they do provide for the best overall reading experience. Some considerations on how to achieve this include:
ensuring that there is at least one link to every EPUB Content Document — allowing the user to reach each document simplifies navigation to the minor headings within them; and
only omitting minor headings from the table of contents — although a subjective decision, there is often a level of diminishing value for navigation (e.g., fourth level and lower headings often only delimit short subsections on a topic).
The table of contents provides users more than just links into the content. It is also a means to understand the structure and ordering of an EPUB Publication. Consequently, users may have difficulty locating where they are in a publication, where they want to go, and also how to return to previous locations when the order of entries in the table of contents does not match the linear reading order.
EPUB Creators should therefore ensure that the entries in the table of contents always match the linear order of the content. Specifically, the order of entries should reflect both:
spine
; andOnly if there is a logical case for an alternative arrangement of entries should the ordering differ. Such scenarios typically only occur when the content does not have to be read linearly or when additional information is included at the end of a table of contents. For example, the table of contents for a magazine might be ordered to list all the major articles first, followed by features, etc.
When the ordering of the table of contents does not match the content, EPUB Creators should include an explanation why in the accessibility summary.
EPUB Creators should avoid including links to supplementary content at the end of the table of contents. Links to figure, tables, illustrations and similar content is better included as a separate navigation elements (either in the EPUB Navigation Document or in the spine). EPUB Creators can include links to these additional navigation lists in the table of contents.
The following guidance is only for EPUB Content Documents. The type
attribute is
the only means of adding structural information to Media Overlay Documents so that features
like lists and tables can be navigated more efficiently. It is also required in the EPUB
Navigation Document to identify key structures.
Although the role
attribute may seem similar in nature to the type
attribute [EPUB-3], their target uses in EPUB Content Documents do not
overlap.
The key difference between these attributes is that the role
attribute bridges
accessibility in content while the type
attribute provides hooks to enable Reading
System behaviors. Omitting roles lessens the accessibility for users of Assistive Technologies,
in other words, while omitting types diminishes certain functionality in Reading Systems (e.g.,
pop-up footnotes or special presentations of the content).
Since each attribute offers different advantages, it is not necessary that they be used together.
Due to the lack of restrictions on where EPUB Creators can use the type
attribute,
pairing the attributes may cause accessibility issues (e.g., putting roles on the [HTML]
body
element).
In particular, the use of the type
attribute is not a means of satisfying
requirements for ARIA roles in WCAG.
For EPUB Creators looking to move from the type
attribute to using ARIA roles, the
EPUB Type to ARIA Role
Authoring Guide guide details notable authoring differences between the two attributes.
It also includes a mapping table of semantics in the EPUB Structural Semantics Vocabulary to
equivalent ARIA roles in [DPUB-ARIA-1.0] and [WAI-ARIA-1.1].
Although EPUB Publications appear as single contiguous documents to users when read, they are typically composed of many individual EPUB Content Documents. This practice keeps the amount of markup that has to be rendered small to reduce the load time in Reading Systems (i.e., to minimize the time the user has to wait for a document to appear). It is rare, at least for books, for an EPUB Publication to contain only one Content Document with all the content in it.
When content is chunked in this way, it often requires the EPUB Creator to make decisions about how best to restructure the information. A part, for example, will typically not include all the chapters that belong to it. The EPUB Creator will instead separate the part heading from each chapter, putting each into a separate document.
Although visually these restructuring decisions can be hidden from readers, they impact the functionality of Assistive Technologies. In the case of [WAI-ARIA-1.1] roles, the result is that only the subset present in the currently-loaded EPUB Content Document are exposed to users. An Assistive Technology cannot provide a list of landmarks for the whole publication, as it cannot see outside the current document.
To counteract this destructuring effect, EPUB Creators sometimes think to re-add or re-identify
structures in the belief that having this information in every document will be helpful to users
(e.g., adding an extra [HTML] section
element around a chapter to indicate it
belongs to a part, or putting the part semantic on the body
tag). All this practice
does, however, is add repetition that is not only disruptive when reading but can make the
structure of the publication harder to follow. EPUB Creators are therefore advised not to
attempt to rebuild structures in these ways.
For example, consider a book that has five parts and each part contains five chapters. Structurally, each chapter belongs to its part (i.e., is grouped with it), as in the following markup:
<section
role="doc-part">
<h1>Part 1</h1>
<section
role="doc-chapter">
<h2>Chapter 1</h2>
…
</section>
…
</section>
Since this would lead to a large content file, the part heading is typically split out into its own Content Document so that it will appear on its own page:
<html … >
…
<body
role="doc-part">
<h1>Part 1</h1>
</body>
</html>
Each chapter is then separated into a separate Content Document:
<html … >
…
<body
role="doc-chapter">
<h2>Chapter 1</h2>
…
</body>
</html>
It is not necessary to add a part wrapper to each chapter, as in the following example:
<html … >
…
<body
role="doc-part">
<section
role="doc-chapter">
<h2>Chapter 1</h2>
…
</section>
</body>
</html>
Doing so introduces a new part
landmark into each document, which will cause an
Assistive Technology to inform the user that the landmark is available to navigate to.
[WAI-ARIA-1.1] landmarks are similar in nature to EPUB landmarks [EPUB-3]: both are designed to provide users with quick access to the major structures of a document, such as chapters, glossaries and indexes. ARIA landmarks are compiled automatically by Assistive Technologies from the roles that have been applied to the markup, so EPUB Creators only need to follow the requirement to include roles for the landmarks to be made available to users.
Although automatic generation of ARIA landmarks simplifies authoring, it also means that ARIA landmarks are limited to how the EPUB Publication has been chunked up into Content Documents. An Assistive Technology can only present the landmarks available in the currently-loaded document; it cannot provide a complete picture of all the landmarks in a multi-document publication (see the previous section for more discussion about content chunking).
EPUB landmarks, on the other hand, are compiled by the EPUB Creator prior to distribution, and
are not directly linked to the use of the type
attribute [EPUB-3] in the content. They are designed to simplify
linking to major sections of the publication in a machine-readable way, as Reading Systems do
not scan the entire publication for landmarks, either. EPUB landmarks are typically not as
numerous as ARIA landmarks, as Reading Systems only expose so many of these navigation aids.
Given these differences in application, however, it is important to include EPUB landmarks and not rely only on the presence of ARIA roles to facilitate navigation, and vice versa. Each aids navigation in its own way.
The EPUB specification does not require that EPUB Creators include a specific set of landmarks, but it is recommended to include a link to the start of the body matter as well as to any major reference sections (e.g., table of contents, endnotes, bibliography, glossary, index).
The following resources explain EPUB and ARIA landmarks in more detail.
EPUB 2 guide element
EPUB 3 landmarks nav
ARIA 1.1 landmarks
[WCAG2] Success Criterion 2.4.2 requires
that each web page include a title. EPUB has a similar requirement for EPUB Publications:
publications require a [DCTERMS] title
element in the Package Document metadata.
The [WCAG2] requirement is not satisfied by the EPUB requirement, however.
When authoring an EPUB Publication each EPUB Content Document also requires a descriptive title that describes its content. If not provided, Assistive Technologies often will announce the name of the file to users.
If the title includes structural context (e.g., the part heading a chapter belongs to, or the name of the publication), order the title such that the most precise description of the current document comes first.
For more information about titles, see Technique H25.
To a user, an EPUB Publication appears as a single document that they read from beginning to end,
even though the content is often split across numerous EPUB Content Documents. As a result,
their natural expectation is that the headings reflect their position in the overall hierarchy
of the publication, despite the publication not actually being a single document (e.g., if a
part heading is expressed in an [HTML] h1
element, each chapter that belongs to
the part will have an h2
heading).
Technique G141: Organizing a page
using headings instructs EPUB Creators on correctly using numbered headings within a
document, but with EPUB Publications the numbered headings also need to remain consistent across
documents. Practically, this means that each EPUB Content Document does not have to begin with
an h1
heading unless the first heading is a top-level heading — the first heading
needs to have a numbered heading element that reflects its actual position in the
publication.
EPUB Creators also to need chunk their content so that the first heading in a document always has
the highest number. For example, if a document starts with an h3
heading, there
should not be an h2
heading later in the document (e.g., do not include the start
of a new section with the trailing subsections of the previous). It is acceptable for there to
be subsequent headings at the same level as the first (e.g., multiple subsections in one
document could all have h3
headings).
[WCAG2] Success Criterion 2.4.6 currently states that all headings must describe their topic or purpose. The implication of this wording is that all chapters in a novel, for example, have a topic or purpose and that the topic or purpose is always clearly reflected by the title of the chapter. Not only is this not always the case, but this success criterion also complicates the use of chapter numbers as headings since these do not establish a topic.
After discussion in the Accessibility Guidelines Working Group's issue tracker, it is clear that the understanding document for 2.4.6 captures the intent of the success criterion better than the current wording — namely, that the requirement for headings is only that they establish a unique context for the content.
By this interpretation, the headings in publications should always pass provided they are unique.
It is expected that the wording of the success criterion will be updated to better reflect the uniqueness requirement, likely in the future WCAG 3 due the complexities of changing the wording for WCAG 2.
The first version of these techniques only required alternative text for images regardless of their complexity. This exception is no longer valid.
EPUB Creators must now ensure that their image-based content meets [WCAG2] requirements for alternative text and extended descriptions to conform with [EPUB-A11Y-11].
The following documents provide guidance on including extended descriptions:
DIAGRAM Image Guidelines for EPUB 3 — recommendations for the inclusion of alternative text and extended descriptions.
[WCAG2] Success Criterions 3.1.1 and 3.1.2 deal with the language of a page and changes of language with in, respectively.
For EPUB Publications, the Package Document is also an important source of metadata information about the publication. For example, Reading Systems expose details of the publications to users in their bookshelves using this information.
Consequently, it is necessary to provide the language of all text content in the Package Document
to conform with these WCAG success criteria. The easiest way to meet this requirement is to add
an xml:lang
attribute on the root package
element
[EPUB-3].
If individual metadata fields within the Package Document are expressed in a different language,
it is similarly required that the language change be identified by an xml:lang
attribute on the element for the field.
Providing this information enables Reading Systems to correctly render the text content in the proper language for users.
The languages specified in the Package Document have no effect on individual EPUB Content Documents (i.e., the language of each document must be specified using the language expression mechanisms it provides).
In addition to being able to express the language of text content, the Package Document also
allows EPUB Creators to identify the languages of the EPUB Publication in dc:language
elements
[EPUB-3].
Although it is not strictly required to set this information to meet [WCAG2] Success Criterion 3.1.1, as it is only informative, it should be considered a best practice to always set this field with the proper language information. (Note that EPUB3 requires the language always be specified, so omitting will fail validation requirements.)
Although Reading Systems do not use this language information to render the text content of the EPUB Publication, they do use it to optimize the reading experience for users (e.g., to preload text-to-speech engines so users do not have a delay when synthesizing the text).
The languages specified in the Package Document have no effect on individual EPUB Content Documents (i.e., the language of each document must be specified using the language expression mechanisms it provides).
[WCAG2] Success Criterion 1.1.1 requires that text equivalents be provided for all non-text content to meet Level A. In some regions (e.g., Asia), it is not uncommon to find images of individual text characters, despite the availability of Unicode character equivalents. This practice occurs for various reasons, such as ease of translation of older documents and for compatibility across Reading Systems. The use of images in most instances leads to the text not being accessible to non-visual users, however.
When individual characters are replaced by images, there is invariably a negative effect on text-to-speech playback, even when alternative text is provided (e.g., if single characters within a word are replaced by images, the word will not be read as a single unit of text). It is also problematic for visual users, as the images often scale poorly and the characters cannot be changed to different font families to meet user preferences.
The use of Unicode characters for all text content avoids this problem, allowing content to successfully meet the minimum requirement for Level A.
For compliance with Level AA, EPUB Creators are directed to Success Criterion 1.4.5 which further restricts the use of images of text to only a set of essential cases.
As EPUB Publications can be composed of more than one rendition, it is possible that different versions of the content will have different levels of accessibility. For example, an image-based version of the content that lacks alternative text or descriptions could be bundled with a WCAG-compliant text-based serialization. This type of accessible bundling is acceptable, as [WCAG2] allows non-conforming content provided a conforming alternate version is available.
The [EPUBMultipleRenditions-10] specification defines a set of features for creating these types of EPUB Publications. It specifies a set of attributes that allow a Reading System to automatically select a preferred rendition for the user or to provide the user the option to manually select between the available options. This functionality technically meets the requirements of [WCAG2] in terms of ensuring the user can access the accessible version.
In practice, however, the [EPUBMultipleRenditions-10] specification is not broadly supported in Reading Systems at the time of publication. As a result, a user who obtains an EPUB Publication that contains more than one rendition will only have access to the default. Unless this rendition is the accessible one, the EPUB Publication might not be readable by them.
EPUB Creators therefore need to use their best discretion when implementing this functionality to meet accessibility requirements. EPUB Publications that contain multiple renditions are conformant to the [EPUB-A11Y-11] specification if at least one rendition meets all the content requirements, but EPUB Creators at a minimum need to note that a Reading System that supports multiple renditions is required in their accessibility summary. Any other methods the EPUB Creator can use to make this dependence known is advisable (e.g., in the distribution metadata).
This section will be updated with techniques for using multiple renditions when there is enough support in Reading Systems to broadly recommend their use.
Both the EPUB Structural Semantics Vocabulary [EPUB-SSV] and Digital Publishing WAI-ARIA 1.0 Module [DPUB-ARIA-1.0] include a semantic for static page breaks: pagebreak and doc-pagebreak, respectively.
It is recommended that both semantics be applied to EPUB 3 content to ensure maximum compatibility with Reading Systems and Assistive Technologies.
A title
or aria-label
attribute is required on the element, as it
provides the value that is announced to the user. Do not include the page number as text
content, as this practice forces the user to hear it announced wherever it occurs (e.g., without
any context in the middle of a sentence).
EPUB 2 does not include markup to identify static page break marks in the content. Page break destinations can be included to enable hyperlinking, but the page list is the only way a user can jump to the locations.
Do not use the [HTML] a
element to identify
page break locations in EPUB 3 Publications. Although this element was previously defined as the
anchor for a hyperlink destination, its purpose has been changed in [HTML] for use solely as a
link.
Readers rarely stop reading to review each new page number, so when page numbers are read aloud in the audio playback of a publication it is not only distracting, but can be confusing, as well (e.g., the number could be read out in the middle of a sentence).
To mitigate this potential annoyance to readers, EPUB Creators need to identify page announcements in the EPUB 3 media overlays document when they are included. Identification allows a Reading System to provide a playback experience where the numbers are automatically skipped.
To identify page numbers in EPUB 3 Publications, attach an epub:type
attribute with
the value "pagebreak
"
[EPUB-SSV] to each par
element [EPUB-3] that identifies a page number in the media overlay documents.
Note that as EPUB 2 does not provide text and audio synchronization, this technique does not apply.
A page list — a list of hyperlinks to the static page break locations — is the most effective way for users to find static page locations. Without a page list, the user would have to navigate each page marker in the text, provided they are available and the Reading System provides such functionality.
When a page list is included, Reading Systems can provide users direct access to the list or use it to provide automatic page jump functionality.
The EPUB Navigation Document allows the inclusion of a page-list
nav
[EPUB-3], while the EPUB 2 NCX file provides the same functionality
through the pageList
element [OPF-201].
Users typically want to know the source of the page break markers included in an EPUB Publication when they are derived from a static media. Considerations like which printing, by which publisher or imprint, and whether the pagination comes from the hard or soft cover edition will affect decisions about its usefulness (e.g., does it exactly match the pagination of a print book used in a classroom).
To allow users to determine the suitability of the pagination, identify the ISBN of the source work in the Package Document metadata.
EPUB 3 allows the source of pagination to be explicitly identified using the source-of
property with the
value "pagination
" [EPUB-3].
The source-of
property is particularly useful when there are multiple sources for an
EPUB Publication as it disambiguates which one the pagination came from.
If an ISBN is not available, include as much information as possible about the source publication (e.g., the publisher, date, edition, and binding).
If the page break markers are unique to the EPUB Publication, do not identify a print source.
EPUB Publications typically require preservation of the publisher's and author's intellectual property when distributed (e.g., so that they can be made available for individual sale through online bookstores or distributed through library systems). The most common way to address this need has been through the application of digital rights management (DRM) schemes to the packaged EPUB Publication. DRM enables a variety of security features that aren't native to the EPUB format, such as the ability to limit access to a single user and to limit the length of time the person can access the publication (e.g., library loans).
In general, DRM can be made to work interoperably with Assistive Technologies, but problems arise when DRM restrictions remove direct access to an EPUB Publication or restrict access to the content within it. Unless the Reading System implementing the DRM provides API level access to the content, it can prove difficult, or even impossible, to generate text-to-speech playback, or for a refreshable braille display to have access to the underlying text, as well as cause other accessibility issues.
The application of digital rights management therefore must not impair or impede the functionality of Assistive Technologies on EPUB Publications users have the right to access.
When an EPUB Publication is ingested into a distribution system, such as a bookstore or library, a metadata record is often provided separately to the distributor. In these scenarios, the metadata used to enable discovery of the publication typically comes from the distribution record alone, not from the metadata in the Package Document.
The result is that it is necessary to include as much accessibility metadata in distribution records as their vocabularies allow.
The use of distribution records does not remove the requirement to include accessibility metadata in the Package Document. The metadata in the Package Document ensures accessibility information is always available with the publication.
See the following resources for more information about including accessibility metadata in distribution records:
Note that this change log only identifies substantive changes since EPUB Accessibility Techniques 1.0 — those that affect the conformance of EPUB Publications or are similarly noteworthy.
For a list of all issues addressed during the revision, refer to the working group's issue tracker.
epub:type
attribute does not have to be used in coordination, nor that roles are required where
epub:type
is used.source-of
property in EPUB 3 to identify
which dc:source
element is the source of pagination. See issue 1600.This section is non-normative.
The following members of the EPUB 3 Working Group contributed to the development of this specification: