1 / 17

Publishing Office Documents to the Web

Publishing Office Documents to the Web. Presented by: Lori Bailey Web Accessibility Center www.wac.ohio-state.edu E-mail: webaccess@osu.edu. Why Office Documents?. Seemingly ubiquitous software. Doesn’t play nice with older versions. IE treats “special.”

gad
Download Presentation

Publishing Office Documents to the Web

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Publishing Office Documents to the Web Presented by: Lori Bailey Web Accessibility Center www.wac.ohio-state.eduE-mail: webaccess@osu.edu

  2. Why Office Documents? • Seemingly ubiquitous software. • Doesn’t play nice with older versions. • IE treats “special.” • Internal conversion tools clunky and disappointing.

  3. Accessibility and Office Docs • Must be created with accessibility in mind. • Native files require extras: plug-ins, upgrades, compatible assistive technology. • After conversion: must be edited for accessibility. • Ideal is clean, well-formed (X)HTML.

  4. Options for Web Publishing • Native format (.doc, .xls, .ppt) • Rich Text Format (.rtf) • Use internal converter (“Save as web page”) • “Save as single file web page” • “Save as web page” • “Save as web page – filtered” • Use external converter • Accessible Web Publishing Wizard • HTML Tidy • Dreamweaver: “Clean-up Word HTML”

  5. Native Documents • Benefits: • Easiest method -- no conversion necessary. • Formatting retained • Fully editable in compatible versions of Office • Drawbacks: • Requires IE, a compatible version of the Office program, or an Office document viewer plug-in. • Difficulty opening/saving/printing in external editors.

  6. Native Documents (cont.) • Requirements: • Clearly identify links to native documents. • Provide link to an accessible viewer. • Best suited for: • Known user group with identified compatible software. • Files where formatting must be preserved and/or shared • Examples -- students sharing documents in a computer classroom, collaborative projects, working drafts of internal training modules.

  7. Rich Text Format • Benefits: • Simple conversion: "Save As" option • No additional plug-in required. • Accessible to screen readers and assistive technology, older versions of Office, other applications, PDAs, and etc. • Drawbacks: • Images convert to bitmap files (very large). • Complex formatting is lost.

  8. Rich Text Format (cont.) • Requirements: • Not required to include a link to an RTF-compatible viewer. • Test in multiple browsers (some browsers hang/time-out). • Best suited for: • Simple documents • single-column layouts • no graphics or images.

  9. Before Converting to HTML • Use headings and styles to format text. • Provide text alternatives for images. • Use tables for data, not layout and use the insert table or "Draw Table" tool to define your tables. • Uses bulleted and numbered lists; do not create pseudo-lists using special characters, images, or tabs. • Turn off "Smart Quotes" (under the Format menu, choose Auto Format options) to avoid conversion problems

  10. “Save As Web Page” • “Save as single file web page” • Not designed for web distribution • Uses MIME format • Only supported in IE • “Save as web page” • Non-standard HTML. • Abundance of Microsoft-specific tags. • May break non-IE browsers. • “Save as web page – filtered” • Microsoft-specific tags removed. • No additional “accessibility” tags.

  11. Conversion and Clean-Up Tools • Better Conversion: Web Publishing Wizard • Works within Office • Creates fully accessible versions in multiple formats • Clean-up tools • Dreamweaver: “Clean-up Word HTML” • HTML Tidy (uses Command Prompt) • HTML Tidy online

  12. After Converting to HTML: Document • Identify and validate to DOCTYPE. • Add <title> tag and meta-data where appropriate. • Remove invalid HTML from the <head>. • Add any Header and Footer information . • Verify document structure. • Review lists and bullets • Add navigation structure. • in-page navigation. • links to other documents on your site. • Skip Navigation link.

  13. After Converting to HTML: Images and Graphics • Provide alternative text or designate an empty ALT tag. • Add long descriptions as appropriate for graphics, charts, and other detailed graphic information. • Place images appropriately within the read-order of the text.

  14. After Converting to HTML: Data Tables • Designate row and column headers using the <th> tag. • Provide summaries. • Provide titles using the <caption> tag. • If the data table has two or more levels of row or column headers, use the "headers" attribute to associate data cells with the appropriate headers. • Convert to proportional rather than absolute sizing (recommended).

  15. Resources • Accessible Web Publishing Wizard ($39.95) from the Illinois Center for Instructional Technology Accessibility (iCita): http://cita.disability.uiuc.edu/software/office. • HTML Tidy: SourceForge, see: http://tidy.sourceforge.net/. • HTML Tidy On-Demand: from InfoHound:http://infohound.net/tidy/.

  16. The End

  17. TheEnd

More Related