Page_Sample

Sample Document

This document was created using accessibility techniques for headings, lists, image alternate text, tables, and columns. It should be completely accessible using assistive technologies such as screen readers.

Headings

There are eight section headings in this document. At the beginning, "Sample Document" is a level 1 heading. The main section headings, such as "Headings" and "Lists" are level 2 headings. The Tables section contains two sub-headings, "Simple Table" and "Complex Table," which are both level 3 headings.

Lists

The following outline of the sections of this document is an ordered (numbered) list with six items. The fifth item, "Tables," contains a nested unordered (bulleted) list with two items.

  1. Headings
  2. Lists
  3. Links
  4. Images
  5. Columns
  6. Tables
  • Simple Tables
  • Complex Tables

Links

In web documents, links can point different locations on the page, different pages, or even downloadable documents, such as Word documents or PDFs:

Top of this Page
Sample Document
Sample Document (docx)

Images

Web Access SymbolDocuments may contain images. For example, there is an image of the web accessibility symbol to the left of this paragraph. Its alternate text is "Web Access Symbol".

Alt text should communicate what an image means, not how it looks.

Chart of Screen Reader Market Share.
(Unfortunately, there isn't a way in Word or PDF to include rich formatting, such as a table, in alternate text.)Some images, such as charts or graphs, require long descriptions, but not all document types allow that. In web pages, long descriptions may be provided in several ways: on the page below the image, via a link below the image, or via a link on the image.

Columns

This is an example of columns. With columns, the page is split into two or more horizontal sections. Unlike tables, in which you usually read across a row and then down to the next, in columns, you read down a column and then across to the next.

When columns are not created correctly, screen readers may run lines together, reading the first line of the first column, then the first line of the second column, then the second line of the first column, and so on. Obviously, that is not accessible.

Tables

Simple Tables

Simple tables have a uniform number of columns and rows, without any merged cells:

Screen Reader

Responses

Share

JAWS

853

49%

NVDA

238

14%

Window-Eyes

214

12%

System Access

181

10%

VoiceOver

159

9%

Complex Tables

The following is a complex table, using merged cells as headers for sections within the table. This can’t be made accessible in all types of documents:

May 2012

September 2010

Screen Reader

Responses

Share

Responses

Share

JAWS

853

49%

727

59%

NVDA

238

14%

105

9%

Window-Eyes

214

12%

138

11%

System Access

181

10%

58

5%

VoiceOver

159

9%

120

10%

Published on: March 30, 2023 01:13 PM PST