Please check the errata for any errors or issues reported since publication.
See also translations.
Copyright © 2015-2018 W3C® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio, Beihang). W3C liability, trademark and document use rules apply.
Assistive technologies need semantic information about the structures and expected behaviors of a document in order to convey appropriate information to persons with disabilities. This specification defines a WAI-ARIA 1.1 [WAI-ARIA-1.1] module of core roles specific to web graphics. These semantics allow an author to express the logical structure of the graphic to assistive technologies in order improve accessibility of graphics. Assistive technologies could then enable semantic navigation and adapt styling and interactive features, to provide an optimal experience for the audience. These features complement the graphics and document structure elements defined by HTML [HTML52] and SVG [SVG2].
This document is part of the WAI-ARIA suite described in the WAI-ARIA Overview.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.
This is the Graphics-ARIA 1.0 W3C Recommendation by the Accessible Rich Internet Applications Working Group. The Working Group created a Graphics-ARIA 1.0 Implementation Report to demonstrate that the specification is implementable. A history of changes to Graphics-ARIA 1.0 is available in the appendix.
To comment, file an issue in the W3C graphics-aria GitHub repository. If this is not feasible, send email to [email protected] (comment archive). Comments received on the Graphics-ARIA 1.0 Recommendation cannot result in changes to this version of the specification, but may be addressed in errata or future versions of Graphics-ARIA. The Working Group may not make formal responses to comments but future work undertaken by the Working Group may address comments received on this document. In-progress updates to the document may be viewed in the publicly visible editors' draft.
This document was published by the Accessible Rich Internet Applications Working Group as a Recommendation.
Comments regarding this document are welcome. Please send them to [email protected] (archives).
Please see the Working Group's implementation report.
This document has been reviewed by W3C Members, by software developers, and by other W3C groups and interested parties, and is endorsed by the Director as a W3C Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited from another document. W3C's role in making the Recommendation is to draw attention to the specification and to promote its widespread deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability of the Web.
This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.
This document is governed by the 1 February 2018 W3C Process Document.
This section is non-normative.
WAI-ARIA is a technical specification that provides a framework to improve the accessibility and interoperability of web content and applications. It enables web browsers to map the accessibility semantics in web content to platform-specific accessibility APIs. This enables web content to be interoperable with platform assistive technologies, similar to native platform applications, without requiring authors to include platform dependencies.
This specification is a modular extension of WAI-ARIA [WAI-ARIA-1.1] designed to support graphics. The goals of this specification include:
This specification defines the core roles that would be used in all structured graphics or diagrams. It establishes the default roles that can be used to describe graphical markup elements such as shapes and canvases. In combination with WAI-ARIA attributes to provide alternative text and to indicate relationships between elements, this provides a framework for annotating many figures and diagrams. Future work will expand on this framework to enable more detailed annotation of data-rich graphics such as charts or maps.
For a more detailed explanation of WAI-ARIA please refer to the WAI-ARIA Introduction and how it applies to Rich Internet Application Accessibility.
This specification defines a module of WAI-ARIA for graphics, consisting of graphics-specific element roles. It impacts several audiences:
Each conformance requirement indicates the audience to which it applies.
This module follows the general User Agent support principles defined in WAI-ARIA [WAI-ARIA-1.1]. The roles defined here do not require any change in behavior by user agents other than in the information exposed to the accessibility API. However, the semantics defined here provide the ability for user agents to enhance the general user interface presented to readers. For example, a user agent may provide alternative keyboard navigation suitable to a graphical environment, or may allow users to extract a copy of a graphic from a larger document.
The WAI-ARIA Graphics module follows the model for co-evolution of WAI-ARIA and host languages defined in WAI-ARIA [WAI-ARIA-1.1]. It is intended to augment semantics in supporting languages like HTML [HTML52], SVG [SVG2] and EPUB, or to be used as an accessibility enhancement technology in other markup-based languages that do not explicitly include support for ARIA. WAI-ARIA roles clarify semantics to assistive technologies when authors create new types of objects, via style and script, or use markup languages which describe the visual appearance of a document rather than its meaning.
Although markup languages may provide some of these semantics natively, it is expected that there will be a persistent need for the semantics provided by the WAI-ARIA Graphics module. Some host languages exist to create semantics for features other than the user interface. For example, SVG expresses the semantics behind production of graphical objects, not of user interface components that those objects may represent. Host languages such as these might, by design, not provide native semantics that map to all of this specification's features. In these host languages, the WAI-ARIA Graphics module could be adopted as a long-term approach to add semantic information.
Programmatic access to accessibility semantics is essential for assistive technologies. For more information, refer to the Assistive Technologies section in WAI-ARIA [WAI-ARIA-1.1].
For the graphics roles in particular, two categories of assistive technology are particularly relevant, but have different needs:
The role descriptions suggest which features of an element with that role are considered semantically important and should be conveyed to the reader whenever possible.
The main content of this specification is normative and defines requirements that impact conformance claims. Introductory material, appendices, sections marked as "non-normative" and their subsections, diagrams, examples, and notes are informative (non-normative). Non-normative material provides advisory information to help interpret the guidelines but does not create requirements that impact a conformance claim.
Normative sections provide requirements that user agents must follow for an implementation to conform to this specification. The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL in this document are to be interpreted as described in Keywords for use in RFCs to indicate requirement levels [RFC2119]. RFC-2119 keywords are formatted in uppercase and contained in an element with class="rfc2119"
. When the keywords shown above are used, but do not share this format, they do not convey formal information in the RFC 2119 sense, and are merely explanatory, i.e., informative. As much as possible, such usages are avoided in this specification.
Normative sections provide requirements that authors, user agents and assistive technologies MUST follow for an implementation to conform to this specification.
Non-normative (informative) sections provide information useful to understanding the specification. Such sections may contain examples of recommended practice, but it is not required to follow such recommendations in order to conform to this specification.
This section is non-normative.
While some terms are defined in place, the following definitions are used throughout this document.
Operating systems and other platforms provide a set of interfaces that expose information about objects and events to assistive technologies. Assistive technologies use these interfaces to get information about and interact with those widgets. Examples of accessibility APIs are Microsoft Active Accessibility [MSAA], Microsoft User Interface Automation [UI-AUTOMATION], MSAA with UIA Express [UIA-EXPRESS], the Mac OS X Accessibility Protocol [AXAPI], the Linux/Unix Accessibility Toolkit [ATK] and Assistive Technology Service Provider Interface [AT-SPI], and IAccessible2 [IAccessible2].
Hardware and/or software that:
This definition may differ from that used in other documents.
Examples of assistive technologies that are important in the context of this document include the following:
In this specification, attribute is used as it is in markup languages. Attributes are structural features added to elements to provide information about the states and properties of the object represented by the element.
A set of instance objects that share similar characteristics.
In this specification, element is used as it is in markup languages. Elements are the structural elements in markup language that contains the data profile for objects.
A programmatic message used to communicate discrete changes in the state of an object to other objects in a computational system. User input to a web page is commonly mediated through abstract events that describe the interaction and can provide notice of changes to the state of a document object. In some programming languages, events are more commonly known as notifications.
Content provided for information purposes and not required for conformance. Content required for conformance is referred to as normative.
Required for conformance. By contrast, content identified as informative or "non-normative" is not required for conformance.
In the context of user interfaces, an item in the perceptual user experience, represented in markup languages by one or more elements, and rendered by user agents.
In the context of programming, the instantiation of one or more classes and interfaces which define the general characteristics of similar objects. An object in an accessibility API may represent one or more DOM objects. Accessibility APIs have defined interfaces that are distinct from DOM interfaces.A description of the characteristics of classes and how they relate to each other.
Attributes that are essential to the nature of a given object, or that represent a data value associated with the object. A change of a property may significantly impact the meaning or presentation of an object. Certain properties (for example, aria-multiline
) are less likely to change than states, but note that the frequency of change difference is not a rule. A few properties, such as aria-activedescendant
, aria-valuenow
, and aria-valuetext
are expected to change often. See clarification of states versus properties.
Main indicator of type. This semantic association allows tools to present and support interaction with the object in a manner that is consistent with user expectations about other objects of that type.
The meaning of something as understood by a human, defined in a way that computers can process a representation of an object, such as elements and attributes, and reliably represent the object in a way that various humans will achieve a mutually consistent understanding of the object.
A state is a dynamic property expressing characteristics of an object that may change in response to user action or automated processes. States do not affect the essential nature of the object, but represent data associated with the object or user interaction possibilities. See clarification of states versus properties.
A hierarchical definition of how the characteristics of various classes relate to each other, in which classes inherit the properties of superclasses in the hierarchy. A taxonomy can comprise part of the formal definition of an ontology.
Any software that retrieves, renders and facilitates end user interaction with Web content. This definition may differ from that used in other documents.
Discrete user interface object with which the user can interact. Widgets range from simple objects that have one value or operation (e.g., check boxes and menu items), to complex objects that contain many managed sub-objects (e.g., trees and grids).
This section defines additions to the WAI-ARIA role taxonomy and describes the characteristics and properties of all roles. See ARIA Roles for descriptions of the fields provided by this module.
Authors are given the ability to influence what is presented to assistive technologies and to influence navigation through the use of roles and properties. This includes the ability to mark elements as having no semantic importance. With graphics, there are many cases where presenting and navigating every element will make the graphic harder to understand and use.
Authors may mark elements for exclusion
from the semantic representation of the document
(the accessibility tree) by assigning
the role none
or presentation
.
The element with this role should be treated transparently
by assistive technologies, as if its children or text content
were directly contained by its parent element.
In addition, certain roles,
such as img
or graphics-symbol
,
when assigned to a parent element, will cause all child
DOM structure to be omitted from the accessibility tree.
This is indicated by the "Children Presentational"
value in the role characteristics table.
Finally, the native semantics of the graphics language
may also default to ignoring DOM structure that does not have
semantic data attached; for SVG, this is defined in the SVG Accessibility API Mappings specification [SVG-AAM-1.0].
In all cases, to be considered presentational, an element must not be interactive
and must not be assigned any accessible properties or alternative text.
A role of none
or presentation
will be ignored
for interactive elements or those with WAI-ARIA states and properties.
Below is an alphabetical list of the WAI-ARIA roles defined in this specification. They would normally be used in combination with other roles defined in WAI-ARIA to annotate graphics within documents and rich internet applications [WAI-ARIA-1.1].
document
in which
the visual appearance or layout of content conveys meaning.
graphics-document
that represents a distinct object or sub-component
with semantic meaning.
A graphical object may itself have nested sub-components.
graphics-document
(role)
A type of document
in which
the visual appearance or layout of content conveys meaning.
Similar to other document
types,
the graphics-document
role applies to the root element of
a region of the page containing related information,
where the user's primary interaction mode is expected to be
browsing the document rather than controlling an application.
The element with this role
may be the root element of the document file,
or of a nested structure within it.
The graphics-document
may be distinguished
from similar roles as follows:
Relative to other documents, a graphics-document
is distinguished by the semantic importance of its
visual (usually two-dimensional) representation.
User agents and assistive technologies
SHOULD take this into consideration
when supporting navigation of the graphic.
Accessibility technologies that re-format or re-style a document
SHOULD NOT alter the layout of a graphics-document
except in ways that are consistent
with the semantic roles and relationships of its content.
Relative to an img
, a graphics-document
is distinguished by the structured nature of its content.
Its child elements may have semantic meaning,
and may include links or other interactive widgets.
Relative to a graphics-object
,
a graphics-document
is self-contained.
Its meaning persists when separated from surrounding content.
The element with the graphics-document
role defines
the scope and context for interpretation of the child content.
In general, authors SHOULD use the graphics-document
role
for structured graphics such as
charts, maps, diagrams, technical drawing, blue prints and instructional graphics.
However, if a single large graphic has discrete regions
that may be safely re-arranged without sacrificing meaning,
each of those regions SHOULD be a distinct graphics-document
.
An alternative role (such as figure
)
may be used to group them together.
One graphics-document
may also be nested inside another,
for example a bar chart that is embedded in a map
or a matrix of chart panels
should have a role of graphics-document
.
The nested document provides encapsulation;
navigation between components of
the inner and outer graphics should be explicit.
To support user agents and assistive technologies
based on the ARIA 1.0 specification,
authors may wish to include the document
role
as a fallback value,
in the form role="graphics-document document"
.
Future specifications may define more specific roles
for particular types of graphical documents with
special semantic structures. Those more specific roles
would be subclasses of graphics-document
.
Characteristic | Value |
---|---|
Superclass Role: | document |
Related Concepts: | |
Inherited States and Properties: |
|
Name From: | author |
Accessible Name Required: | True |
Children Presentational: | False |
graphics-object
(role)
A section of a graphics-document
that represents a distinct object or sub-component
with semantic meaning.
A graphical object may itself have nested sub-components.
Container elements that represent a collection
of disconnected objects should be given the
group
or list
roles, instead.
Grouping elements that do not have semantic meaning
and do not alter the semantic context provided by an ancestor
(for example, a div
or SVG g
that is only used for styling or layout)
SHOULD NOT be given a role.
The lack of role may be explicitly indicated
with the role none
or presentation
.
Unlike a graphics-document
,
a graphics-object
need not be self-contained,
and it does not establish a new context for navigation.
However, user agents and assistive technologies
SHOULD provide a way for users, particularly non-visual users,
to navigate the nested structure of objects
in a hierarchical manner, similar to nested lists.
To support user agents and assistive technologies
based on the ARIA 1.0 specification,
authors may wish to include the group
role
as a fallback value,
in the form role="graphics-object group"
.
Characteristic | Value |
---|---|
Superclass Role: | group |
Related Concepts: | |
Inherited States and Properties: |
|
Name From: |
|
Accessible Name Required: | False |
Children Presentational: | False |
graphics-symbol
(role)A graphical object used to convey a simple meaning or category, where the meaning is more important than the particular visual appearance. It may be a component of a larger structured graphic such as a chart or map. The symbol itself is an atomic object; children are presentational.
When used as part of a structured symbolic language,
the aria-roledescription
property
(introduced in ARIA 1.1 [WAI-ARIA-1.1])
can be used to name the symbol type
separately from the name and description
for the particular instance of the symbol.
To support user agents and assistive technologies
based on the ARIA 1.0 specification,
authors may wish to include the img
role
as a fallback value,
in the form role="graphics-symbol img"
,
if that is not already the default semantic role for the element.
Characteristic | Value |
---|---|
Superclass Role: | img |
Related Concepts: | symbol |
Inherited States and Properties: |
|
Name From: | author |
Accessible Name Required: | True |
Children Presentational: | True |
The following core ARIA roles, defined in ARIA 1.1 [WAI-ARIA-1.1], are also relevant for annotating graphics:
img
(image) defines a single graphic
that is perceived as an indivisible whole.
Unlike a graphics-document
,
an image cannot have navigable or interactive child content.
Unlike a graphics-symbol
,
an image may require a detailed text description
to fully convey its meaning to non-visual users.
figure
defines a container element
for content (including graphics) that is a key part
of the containing document but is outside the
normal reading stream.
A figure will often contain one or more elements
with the img
or graphics-document
roles,
but may also contain text captions, credits, or other related content.
The following examples demonstrate appropriate use of
img
, figure
, and graphics-document
in a document.
WAI-ARIA provides a collection of accessibility state and properties which are used to support platform accessibility APIs on various operating system platforms. Assistive technologies may access this information through an exposed user agent DOM or through a mapping to the platform accessibility API. When combined with roles, the user agent can supply the assistive technologies with user interface information to convey to the user at any time. Changes in states or properties will result in a notification to assistive technologies, which could alert the user that a change has occurred.
The full commit history to WAI-ARIA Graphics Module 1.0 is available.
This section is non-normative.
The following people contributed to the development of this document.
This publication has been funded in part with U.S. Federal funds from the Department of Education, National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), initially under contract number ED-OSE-10-C-0067 and currently under contract number HHSP23301500054C. The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Education, nor does mention of trade names, commercial products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.