[Blindmath] Accessible PDF testing
Greg Williams
greg.williams.1978 at gmail.com
Fri Feb 15 17:22:08 UTC 2013
Hi Claire,
I would be happy to take a loo at it.
Kind regards,
Greg
On 2/15/2013 9:58 AM, Tochel Claire (NHS EDUCATION FOR SCOTLAND - EH2
1EL) wrote:
> Hi all,
> I wondered if I could ask if there are any list members who have a spare couple of minutes to simply open a report that my team has produced and give me quick feedback on its Accessibility? We created it using LaTeX, have run a range of post-processing checks on it, and have just had it formally reviewed by AbilityNet - but I would hugely appreciate some first-hand comments from a specialist membership such as this list who may use a range of screen readers or other technologies. One of my colleagues tried to read it using Zoomtext and did not seem to have much luck, but AbilityNet have told me that their tests with Jaws were successful.
>
> I don't want to take up much of anyone's time, but will happily pass on the URL (or email a PDF) to anyone who can spare a small amount of time.
>
> I should warn you that it is a report on the Dental Workforce in Scotland - so if you are having trouble sleeping it may come in handy...
>
> Claire Tochel
> Analyst
> NHS Education for Scotland
>
>
>
>
>
> From: Tochel Claire (NHS EDUCATION FOR SCOTLAND - EH2 1EL)
> Sent: 16 July 2012 18:07
> To: 'blindmath at nfbnet.org'
> Subject: Accessible documents - alternate text in LaTeX
>
> Hi all,
> I am new to this forum so I hope that my query is appropriate.
>
> I work in a team which uses LaTeX to produce analytical reports for Government, Health Boards, healthcare professionals and the public in Scotland. We are trying to make our reports as Accessible as possible, but I have not been able to work out if it's possible to automatically build in alternate text to figures and tables. I know how to do this manually as post-processing in Adobe Acrobat, but it is time consuming and has to be done for each new version of a document, which is obviously very inefficient.
>
> Do you know if there is a way of building this in to the LaTeX code?
>
> I would also appreciate any other tips or advice when preparing technical reports in LaTeX to maximise their Accessibility to potential readers with visual impairments.
>
> Thanks
> Claire
>
>
>
> ____________________________________
>
> Claire Tochel
> Analyst
> c.tochel at nhs.net<mailto:c.tochel at nhs.net>
> NHS Education for Scotland
> www.nes.scot.nhs.uk<http://www.nes.scot.nhs.uk>
> 0131 313 8085
>
>
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