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To meet 1.4.3, you would. The working group did not anticipate that this would be an issue for browser standard controls, so no exception was provided. An author might make a statement of partial conformance due to 3rd party content (https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG21/#conformance-partial) but according to the WCAG spec this would still be a conformance issue. |
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good times, since this will be browser-dependent in many cases. i do wish there was a clearer demarcation of "WCAG vs UAAG" / "author responsibility vs browser developers" ... but ho hum |
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Where end users can make the contrast of web content higher (or lower) through an operating system setting, are WCAG evaluators also permitted to adjust their own operating system settings to increase the contrast of certain web pages elements, and thus pass 1.4.3? In the Firefox bug for selected I'm working on contacting the Chrome team for a similar fix. Assuming these particular browser fixes do occur, they won't make @JAWS-test's important question go away entirely, but I hope the dilemmas for auditors and developers can become less frequent in practice. More importantly, these fixes in browser bugs should improve accessibility incrementally for end-users. |
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possibly related thoughts #2909 |
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Related Chrome bugs (new). Until at least one of these two bugs is fixed, they demonstrate the problem @JAWS-test asked about.
Related Firefox bug. The discussion has concentrated on which Windows system color should apply, not on styling with CSS. The Windows system color could still cause web content to fail 1.4.3 even after the fix. |
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If a standard unchanged HTML element does not keep the contrasts (e.g. a select with option), do I have to adjust the colors or use a custom drop down?
Of course, this is an error of the browsers, which I as a web developer am not responsible for and partly cannot influence at all (because I have no access to certain elements via CSS, which the browser displays for standard elements). But a corresponding exception is not mentioned in 1.4.3. There is only an exception for non-text contrasts in 1.4.11.
Examples: BIK-BITV/BIK-Web-Test#317. There, by the way, it is claimed: "Only if user-defined controls are used, for example rebuilt selects with their own styles, then contrast requirements must be fulfilled for these custom controls" - but I don't think that is what 1.4.3 says.
Related: #866
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