| Title | Presentational elements in order to convey information and/or relationships. |
|---|---|
| Description | CSS used for presentation characteristics that are purely decorative (i.e. not conveying meaning or relationships) |
| Creator | BenToWeb (evlach@…) |
| Rights | Copyright BenToWeb 2004-2007 |
| Language | English |
| Date | 2005-08-28 |
| Status | rejected QA |
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: span
(namespace: http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml)
.
Technical specification: Grouping elements: the DIV and SPAN elements .
The test case is intended to pass as CSS is purely decorative and conveys no meaning at all. (Test case "rejected QA" because it does not contain information or relationships conveyed through presentation.)
Check whether CSS has been used to convey information and/or relationship.
Three or more accessibility experts.
“Rules” refer to success criteria in WCAG 2.0, checkpoints in WCAG 1.0 and similar requirements.
The following success criterion is not applicable to this test case: http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/WD-WCAG20-20070517/Overview.html#content-structure-separation-programmatic.
CSS has not been used in order to convey information.
This test case does not map to a WCAG 2.0 technique or failure.
The test case passes (line 11, column 1) the following success criterion: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/WD-WCAG20-20060427/guidelines.html#content-structure-separation-programmatic.
CSS has not been used in order to convey information.