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current WCAG version 2.1

Screen Reader Tests

WCAG Success Criteria Tests

The intention is to reduce the variance of testing for web accessibility between professionals and people who have an interest in accessibility. Agreeing on what constitutes a failure is the first step towards testing in a consistent way and having consistent results.

Portions of the tests are sourced from the Deque University Introduction to WCAG Conformance Testing detailed methodology and Melbourne university responsibilities by project role.

The Tests

Using the tests

Each test is written in a way which is clear to understand and straightforward to apply to web content. For example accessibility guidance for font sizing contains the following test:

  • text smaller than 18.6px and bold has a minimum contrast ratio of 4.5:1 with the background colour
  • text at least 18.6px and bold has a minimum contrast ratio of 3:1 with the background colour
  • text smaller than 24px and not bold has a minimum contrast ratio of 4.5:1 with the background colour
  • text at least 24px and not bold has a minimum contrast ratio of 3:1 with the background colour

If you ensure these tests are applied to new content you will have passed the success criteria 1.4.3 Contrast (Minimum). Some tests are conditional:

  • A test followed by AND = the previous test AND this test must be applied to pass the success criteria
  • A test followed by OR = the previous test OR this test must be applied to pass the success criteria

Interpreting the tests

  • 1.1.1 Non-text Content - two different modalities of CAPTCHA are provided
  • 1.1.1 Non-text Content - or, providing access to a human to bypass CAPTCHA
  • 1.1.1 Non-text Content - or, not requiring CAPTCHA for authorised users

Apply any of the 3 tests

  • 1.3.1 Info and Relationships - two or more radio buttons, or checkbox controls must be grouped using a <fieldset>
  • 1.3.1 Info and Relationships - and, the <fieldset> must have a succinct <legend> element

Apply both tests

The Categories

These cateogries group the WCAG 2.1 level AA success criteria according to the section of the website you're developing or your role. Allowing you to focus on the relevant criteria you need to apply and understand versus the criteria which can be ignored. For example, if your website doesn't have video or audio content you don't need to test against those criteria.

What this list isn't

It's not a catch-all list for things which you feel should be accessibility failures but aren't. This is a list of our interpretation of what each WCAG 2.1 success criteria means and distilling that meaning into one or more tests.

Accessibility best practice (those things which should be WCAG failures but aren't) will be in a separate filterable list.

Contributing

Disagree with any of the tests? great! There are several ways to contribute:

  • Log an issue in this repo, click "Issues" and follow the process of adding an issue

If your request is to add a further test, you will need to justify how the test fails against WCAG, for example non-sequential headings are not a WCAG 2.1 failure.

https://www.tpgi.com/heading-off-confusion-when-do-headings-fail-wcag/

WCAG techniques, such as H42: Using h1-h6 to identify headings and ARIA12: Using role=heading to identify headings, recommend that heading markup indicate the appropriate heading level for the content, but they don’t go so far as to define what’s “appropriate”—an issue that has been the subject of considerable discussion. So although hierarchical heading structures reflect a best practice, skipping heading levels does not represent a WCAG failure.

In short all requests are welcomed and appreciated, but are included only after consensus amongst the community.

This project is aimed at conveying facts. Tests should strive to avoid personal preferences for identifying accessibility failures.

License

MIT Licensed.