| Title | strong element with CSS style for bold used to convey strong emphasis |
|---|---|
| Description | A document that contains a single sentence with a short passage of direct speech. In the direct speech a strong element styled with CSS to look like bold text is used to denote strong emphasis. |
| Creator | BenToWeb (evlach@…) |
| Rights | Copyright BenToWeb 2004-2007 |
| Language | English |
| Date | 2005-08-28 |
| Status | accepted for end user evaluation |
Technologies are markup languages or data formats. If the technology is a markup language, “features” refers to elements and attributes.
XHTML™ 1.0 The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (Second Edition)
Feature: strong
(namespace: http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml)
.
Technical specification: Phrase elements .
The test case is intended to pass because CSS style has not been used in order to convey information (semantic markup has been used).
Check whether CSS style has been used in order to convey information.
Accessibility expert.
“Rules” refer to success criteria in WCAG 2.0, checkpoints in WCAG 1.0 and similar requirements.
The test case passes (line 9, column 15) the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/WD-WCAG20-20070517/Overview.html#content-structure-separation-programmatic.
Assistive technology can determine the strong emphasis from the semantics of the markup (strong element).
The test case maps to technique H49: Using semantic markup to mark emphasized or special text.
The test case passes (line 9, column 15) the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20060427/guidelines.html#content-structure-separation-programmatic.
Assistive technology can determine the strong emphasis from the semantics of the markup (strong element).
Online version: sc1.3.1_l1_105.