Accessibility Checks

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Accessibility metadata added

Accessibility Checks
Checks that the Accessibility metadata panel has been added.

The addition of extra metadata is recommended to help with discovery and accessibility. InDesign 2024.2 and later has a way to add the extra accessibility metadata (known as 'Schema.org' metadata) but CircularFLO users can more easily add and share metadata in their InDesign files by  adding a CircularFLO Metadata Panel.

GreenLight check dialog warning of missing accessibility metadata

Fix this problem by adding a CircularFLO Metadata Panel by choosing GreenLight Tools menu > Accessibility tools panel > Add Circular Flo Metadata panel:

CircularFLO metadata panel

See Accessibility Metadata panel help for further information on the panel’s contents

DAISY article on Schema.org Accessibility Metadata.

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Accessibility Checks

All styles have export tags

Accessibility Checks
This check flags when Paragraph Styles in the InDesign document do not have an export tag applied.

In InDesign, export tags control how Paragraph Styles are mapped to the document tags used in EPUB and HTML and in PDFs. Using export tags clarifies the structure of a document for accessibility purposes but has no visible effect on the exported file.

To map Paragraph Styles to document tags choose Paragraph Styles panel menu > Edit All Export Tags... To the right of each Paragraph Style you can choose between [Automatic] or a specific Tag to map it to – e.g. ‘h2’.

The Edit All Export Tags dialog from InDesign's Paragraph Styles panel menu
GreenLight dialog showing the results of running an All styles have export tags check
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Accessibility Checks

Header tags on sections

Accessibility Checks
This GreenLight check flags when pages that are defined as section opening pages do not start with a paragraph that has a h1 or h2 export tag applied.
To create a new section, select the thumbnail of the page you want to start the section and choose Numbering and Section Options from the Pages panel menu.
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Accessibility Checks

Headings applied in sequence

Accessibility Checks
This check flags when heading styles in the InDesign document have been applied out of sequence.

By marking paragraphs with a suitable export tag we add extra semantic meaning to the text of our publications.

The sequence that headings follow is important for navigation. For example a screen reader user may choose to scan through a long section of text by only reading the headings and subheadings. Heading hierarchy is the term used to indicate that headings are applied in a predictable and logical way.

There are up to six levels of heading available in HTML and therefore in EPUB – from heading level 1 <h1> to heading level 6 <h6>

When ACE, by DAISY reports on well-made accessible documents it checks that heading hierarchy is applied in the correct sequence. For example a top level heading <h1> tag followed by paragraph <p> tags is to be expected, but a heading level 3 <h3> tag should not be used unless it has been preceded by an <h2> heading (which itself has been preceded by a heading level 1 <h1> tag)

This GreenLight checks and flags whether headings are applied in sequence.

GreenLight dialog indicating that a document's Heading hierarchy is correct

If headings are not applied in sequence then the user is taken to their location on the InDesign page and the text is highlighted.

A dialog shows that a paragraph of text has an h3 tag but is preceded by an h1 tag.

The recommended method to manage and apply headings is to use Paragraph Styles effectively.

More info on heading hierarchy from the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)

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Accessibility Checks

Images added to reading order

Accessibility Checks
This check ensures that all images have been added to the reading order.

You can add images to the reading order in the following ways:

• Marking them with the CircularFLO or GreenLight reading order tools

• Anchored them into the text flow as inline or custom anchored objects, or

• Adding the images to the InDesign articles panel.

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Accessibility Checks

Images are described

Accessibility Checks
This check ensure that all images have an image description applied by means of alt tags, or have been marked as decorative (EPUB) / artifact (PDF).

Adding alt tags to images in InDesign provides a text description of the image for users who are visually impaired and are using screen readers. This allows the reader to understand the content of the image and the context in which it is being used in the document.

Alternatively, marking an image as decorative will signal to a screen reader to skip over the image, and take it out of the reading flow.

InDesign’s Object Export Options dialog with Alt Text marked as 'Decorative'

To add an alt tag to an image…

  1. Select the image with InDesign's Selection Tool.
  2. Choose InDesign Object menu > Object Export Options.
  3. Select the Alt Text tab.
  4. Enter a description of the image in the Alt Text field.
  5. Click OK to save the alt tag.
InDesign’s Object Export Options dialog with Alt Text providing a text description of an image

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Accessibility Checks

Reading order defined

Accessibility Checks
This GreenLight check makes sure that the reading order has been set with GreenLight, CircularFLO, or the InDesign Articles panel.

“An EPUB consists of multiple resources that can be completely navigated and consumed by a person or program in some specific order.”

From EPUB 3 Overview - 1.2.1 Reading Order

https://www.w3.org/publishing/epub/epub-overview.html#sec-nav-order

While many reflowable publications have an obvious reading order, or logical progression through their content, fixed-layout publications may be more complex in their design and layout and may consist of multiple readable objects on the same page.

The specific order that these objects are read in, and the order in which they will be read aloud by ebook readers and assistive technology, can be vital for the understanding of the publication.

Use the CircularFLO and GreenLight Reading Order tools to define and modify the reading order of InDesign objects.

This check will skip invisible objects (including object on a hidden layer), objects on a Parent Page and text frame that contain only a single number.

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Accessibility Checks

Tables have header rows

Accessibility Checks
This GreenLight check flags tables that don't have a header row applied.

Converting the first row of a table to a header row makes the table more accessible for users who are visually impaired or who use screen readers to navigate content. Screen readers can identify the header row and read the column names out loud to the user.

Select the first row of the table with the Type Tool (Tip: move to the left of the row and click the right-pointing arrow as an alternative to dragging) and choose Table > Convert Rows > To Header:

InDesign's Convert Rows to Header command
  • A header row will repeat at the top of a page or column.

Working with tables in InDesign

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Accessibility Checks

Text at legible size

Accessibility Checks
This GreenLight check looks for text that is below a recommended minimum size.

Intended for use with print accessibility, this GreenLight check flags up any text in an InDesign document is below the minimum size of 14pt as recommended by the RNIB 'Top tips for creating accessible print documents'.

GreenLight dialog when detecting text below 14pt in document

Fix small text by enlarging the text size. The use of Paragraph Styles is recommended.

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Accessibility Checks

Text contrast has been checked

Accessibility Checks

This check flags when the Text contrast tool has not yet been run for the active InDesign document. Run the Text contrast tool from the GreenLight Accessibility Tools panel to pass this check.

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Accessibility Checks

Text thread pages follow on

Accessibility Checks
This GreenLight check flags any text threads that are not linked to the same page or the following page.

Text threads in InDesign chain together multiple text frames so they can contain a long passage of text (InDesign calls these Stories). Text frames that have been 'threaded' can appear on the same page or span across multiple pages and spreads.

For long text led publications it is not unusual for the entire main text to be one long thread of text frames covering dozens or hundreds of pages.

For ebook accessibility text frames threaded together are expected to be in sequence. Unusual text threads that jump over pages or thread content backwards in page order have been found to affect the successful creation and the subsequent reading order of reflowable ebooks.

To see the flow of text threads shown in InDesign choose InDesign View menu > Extras > Show Text Threads (tip: make sure a text frame is selected with the Selection Tool to see its threads):

Threaded text frames are shown to be out of sequence with page order in InDesign

Fix this problem by either rethreading the text frames or dragging them into the correct sequence with InDesign’s Selection Tool.

InDesign help on Text Threads

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Accessibility Checks