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Accessibility for users with disabilities


From: Matt Campbell
Subject: Accessibility for users with disabilities
Date: Wed, 16 Mar 2011 12:52:35 -0500
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.15) Gecko/20110303 Thunderbird/3.1.9

Hello from a GNUstep newbie,

First a little introduction: I've been learning Cocoa for a project at my job, and I decided to use GNUstep Renaissance for the UI, because I find it much easier than drag-and-drop tools like Interface Builder. So now I'm interested in playing with GNUstep itself; I think it would make an excellent cross-platform GUI toolkit. But I've noticed one major missing feature, which I wonder if anyone else has considered or started to work on: accessibility for users with disabilities, particularly users who are blind or visually impaired.

As I see it, there are three major steps to implementing accessibility:

1. Add a definition of the NSAccessibility protocol and its related constants from Cocoa.

2. Implement NSAccessibility in the standard controls (or more accurately, in their cells). Strive to mimic the NSAccessibility implementations of the respective cells in Cocoa.

3. Implement bridges from NSAccessibility to the native accessibility APIs on the supported platforms. On Windows, the relevant APIs are Microsoft Active Accessibility and IAccessible2. For X-based platforms, I believe the relevant API is AT-SPI, though my knowledge of accessibility in the modern X-based desktops is a bit out of date. This will probably be the most complicated part; MSAA in particular is notoriously hard to get right.

Task 1 should be pretty straightforward, if tedious. Tasks 2 and 3 are big and should probably happen in parallel.

I don't currently have much time to contribute to such an effort, but I can at least provide pointers in the right direction, particularly for the MSAA/IA2 bridge. In any case, I thought I should at least point out the need for this, particularly since accessibility isn't mentioned in the development roadmap.

Question: I've perused some of the Cocoa header files, including NSAccessibility.h. Does that disqualify me from doing a clean-room implementation for GNUstep?

Matt




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