A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://a11ysupport.io/tech/aria/aria-sort_attribute below:

aria-sort_attribute (aria) | Accessibility Support

aria-sort attribute (aria)

Screen Reader support level: partial (33/55)

On this page About this feature

Indicates if items in a table or grid are sorted in ascending or descending order.

Age of results

Results across all tests for this feature range from 4 years ago to 5 years ago. Detailed dates and version information can be found in associated tests.

Caution

Failing or partial results may be out of date. The oldest result is from 5 years ago. Consider running the associated tests and contributing results.

Expectations

What are expectations?

Screen Reader support by expectation Expectation: convey the 'ascending' value Rationale:

Screen reader users need to be aware that the data associated with the header is currently sorted in ascending order.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Examples: Expectation: convey the 'descending' value Rationale:

Screen reader users need to be aware that the data associated with the header is currently sorted in descending order.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Examples: Expectation: convey the 'none' value either by omitting any sort information or by indicating that the header is unsorted but sortable Rationale:

Screen reader users need to be aware that the data associated with the header is not currently sorted. They may also benefit from knowing that the data is sortable.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Examples: Expectation: convey the 'none' value by indicating that the header is unsorted but sortable Rationale:

Developers may use the 'none' value to indicate to screen reader users that a header is sortable but currently unsorted. However, this behavior is not broadly adopted across screen readers and may diverge from the normative ARIA spec.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Notes:

For more information, see #133

Examples: Expectation: convey the 'other' value Rationale:

Screen reader users need to be aware that the data associated with the header is currently sorted in something other than ascending or descending order.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Examples: Expectation: convey changes to the sort value Rationale:

The user needs to know that the value was successfully changed.

Strength of this expectation for different types of assistive technologies: Examples:

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4