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Glossary
Accessibility & HTML Glossary
Clear, example-led definitions of the accessibility and HTML terms that show up in Rocket Validator reports.
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Accessibility
ARIA
ARIA (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) is a set of HTML attributes that add accessibility semantics such as roles, states, and properties to custom UI components. -
Accessibility
ARIA Labeling Techniques
ARIA labeling techniques are a set of methods using WAI-ARIA attributes—primarilyaria-label,aria-labelledby, andaria-describedby—to provide accessible names and descriptions to interactive elements, regions, and widgets so that assistive technologies can convey their purpose to users. -
Accessibility
ARIA Live Politeness Settings
ARIA live politeness settings control how assistive technologies announce dynamic content changes, using thearia-liveattribute with values ofoff,polite, orassertiveto determine whether updates interrupt the user immediately, wait for a pause, or remain silent. -
Accessibility
ARIA Widget Patterns
ARIA widget patterns are standardized interaction models defined by the WAI-ARIA Authoring Practices that describe the expected keyboard behavior, focus management, and ARIA roles, states, and properties for custom interactive UI components like tabs, menus, dialogs, and tree views. -
Accessibility
Accessibility Audit
An accessibility audit is a structured evaluation of a website or app against accessibility standards, combining automated checks with manual and assistive-technology testing. -
Accessibility
Accessibility Tree
The accessibility tree is a parallel structure to the DOM tree that browsers construct to represent the semantic meaning of a web page for assistive technologies such as screen readers, braille displays, and voice control software. -
Accessibility
Accessible Description
An accessible description is a supplementary text string, computed by the browser's accessibility API, that provides additional context or instructions about a user interface element beyond what its accessible name conveys. -
Accessibility
Accessible Name
An accessible name is the text assistive technologies use to identify a UI element, derived from sources such as visible text, labels, alt text, or ARIA naming attributes. -
Accessibility
Accessible Name Computation
Accessible Name Computation is the algorithm defined by the W3C that browsers and assistive technologies use to determine the text name of an interactive element, resolving multiple possible sources—such asaria-labelledby,aria-label, HTML<label>, and element content—into a single accessible name string. -
Accessibility
Alt Text
Alt text (alternative text) is a short written description added to an image's HTML code that conveys the image's content and function to users who cannot see it, primarily through screen readers. -
Accessibility
Browser Accessibility API Mapping
Browser Accessibility API Mapping is the process by which web browsers translate HTML elements, attributes, and ARIA annotations into structured data exposed through platform-specific accessibility APIs, enabling assistive technologies like screen readers to understand and interact with web content. -
Accessibility
Color Contrast
Color contrast is the luminance difference between foreground and background colors, measured as a ratio, used to determine whether text and UI components are readable for users with low vision. -
Accessibility
Content Reflow and Responsive Zoom
Content reflow and responsive zoom refers to the ability of web content to adapt its layout when users zoom in up to 400% or resize their viewport, ensuring all information and functionality remains available without requiring horizontal scrolling in two dimensions. -
HTML
Document Language Declaration
A document language declaration specifies the primary human language of a web page by setting thelangattribute on the<html>element, enabling browsers, screen readers, and other tools to process and present the content correctly. -
Accessibility
Error Identification and Suggestion
Error identification and suggestion is an accessibility practice requiring that input errors are automatically detected, clearly described to the user in text, and accompanied by actionable suggestions for correction when possible. -
Accessibility
Focus Indicator
A focus indicator is a visible outline or style change that shows which interactive element on a web page currently has keyboard focus, enabling users who navigate without a mouse to track their position on the screen. -
Accessibility
Focus Trap
A focus trap is a technique that constrains keyboard focus within a specific region of a page—such as a modal dialog—so that pressing Tab or Shift+Tab cycles only through the interactive elements inside that region until the user explicitly dismisses it. -
Accessibility
Form Label Association
Form label association is the programmatic connection between a form control (such as an input, select, or textarea) and its descriptive label, enabling assistive technologies to announce the purpose of the control when it receives focus. -
HTML
HTML Validation
HTML validation is the process of checking markup against standards to detect structural and syntax errors that can break rendering, accessibility, and interoperability. -
Accessibility
Heading Hierarchy
Heading hierarchy is the structured ordering of HTML heading elements (<h1>through<h6>) in a logical, nested sequence that reflects the document's content outline, enabling users—especially those relying on assistive technologies—to understand and navigate a page's organization. -
Accessibility
Input Purpose and Autocomplete
Input purpose and autocomplete refer to the practice of programmatically identifying the purpose of form fields using the HTMLautocompleteattribute, enabling browsers and assistive technologies to automatically fill in user data and present fields in ways that are easier to understand and complete. -
Accessibility
Keyboard Accessibility
Keyboard accessibility means every interactive part of a website can be reached and operated using a keyboard alone, with logical focus order and visible focus indication. -
Accessibility
Landmark Roles
Landmark roles are specific ARIA roles or HTML5 semantic elements that define the major structural regions of a web page, enabling assistive technology users to quickly identify and navigate to key sections such as the banner, navigation, main content, and footer. -
Accessibility
Live Region
A live region is an area of a web page that dynamically updates its content and communicates those changes to assistive technologies like screen readers, without requiring the user to navigate to the updated area. -
Accessibility
Reduced Motion Preference
The reduced motion preference is an operating system–level setting that users can enable to minimize or eliminate animations, transitions, and other non-essential motion on screen. Web developers can detect this preference using theprefers-reduced-motionCSS media query and adjust or disable animations accordingly. -
Accessibility
Role, State, and Property
In WAI-ARIA, roles, states, and properties are the three categories of attributes that define what a UI element is, what condition it is in, and what characteristics it has, enabling assistive technologies to present and interact with web content accurately. -
Accessibility
Screen Reader
A screen reader is assistive software that converts on-screen content into speech or braille output, allowing blind and low-vision users to navigate websites through structure and semantics. -
HTML
Semantic HTML
Semantic HTML uses elements that describe meaning and structure, such as<main>,<nav>, and<button>, so browsers and assistive technologies can correctly interpret page content. -
Accessibility
Tab Order
Tab order is the sequence in which interactive elements on a web page receive keyboard focus as a user presses the Tab key, determined by the document's source order and any explicittabindexattributes. -
Accessibility
Text Alternatives
Text alternatives are textual substitutes for non-text content such as images, icons, videos, and controls, enabling people who cannot perceive the original content to understand its meaning and purpose through assistive technologies like screen readers. -
Accessibility
WCAG
WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) is the global technical standard for making web content accessible to people with disabilities, published by the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative. -
Accessibility
WCAG Conformance Levels
WCAG Conformance Levels are the three tiers of accessibility compliance—Level A, Level AA, and Level AAA—defined by the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines to classify success criteria by their impact and priority for making web content accessible to people with disabilities. -
Accessibility
WCAG Success Criteria
WCAG Success Criteria are the individual, testable requirements defined by the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines that determine whether web content is accessible to people with disabilities. Each criterion addresses a specific accessibility barrier and is assigned a conformance level of A, AA, or AAA. -
HTML
tabindex Attribute
Thetabindexattribute is an HTML attribute that controls whether an element is focusable via keyboard navigation, and optionally determines its position in the sequential tab order of the page.
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