Title: Accessible PDF
1Accessible PDFs
2Adobe, Acrobat, PDF
- Adobe is a company they are the creators of
Acrobat. - Acrobat is a tool for creating, editing and
viewing PDF files. - PDF is a format or type of document. It stands
for Portable Document Format. The PDF format was
created by Adobe. - The terms Adobe, Acrobat, and PDF are related in
the same way as Microsoft, Word, and doc.
3Accessibility Features in Acrobat and Reader
- Accessibility features in Acrobat and Reader fall
into two broad categories features to make the
reading of PDF documents more accessible and
features to create accessible PDF documents. To
create accessible PDF documents, you must use
Acrobat, not Reader.
4Accessible PDFs have the following characteristics
- . Searchable text
- A document that consists of scanned images of
text is inherently inaccessible because the
content of the document is images, not searchable
text. - Assistive software cannot read or extract the
words, users cannot select or edit the text, and
you cannot manipulate the PDF for accessibility.
You must convert the scanned images of text to
searchable text using optical character
recognition (OCR) before you can use other
accessibility features with the document.
5- Alternative text descriptions
- Document features such as images and interactive
form fields cant be read by a screen reader
unless they have associated alternative text. - Though web links are read by screen readers, you
can provide more meaningful descriptions as
alternative text. Alternative text and tool tips
can aid many users, including those with learning
disabilities.
6More
- Fonts that allow characters to be extracted to
text - The fonts in an accessible PDF must contain
enough information for Acrobat to correctly
extract all of the characters to text for
purposes other than displaying text on the
screen. - Acrobat extracts characters to Unicode text when
you read a PDF with a screen reader or the Read
Out Loud tool, or when you save as text for a
braille printer. This extraction fails if Acrobat
cannot determine how to map the font to Unicode
characters.
7Reading order and document structure tags
- To read a documents text and present it in a way
that makes sense to the user, a screen reader or
other text-to-speech tool requires that the
document be structured. Document structure tags
in a PDF define the reading order and identify
headings, paragraphs, sections, tables, and other
page elements.
8Interactive form fields
- Some PDFs contain forms that a person is to fill
out using a computer. To be accessible, form
fields must be interactivemeaning that a user
must be able to enter values into the form fields.
9Navigational aids
- Navigational aids in a PDFsuch as links,
bookmarks, headings, a table of contents, and a
preset tab order for form fieldsassist all users
in using the document without having to read
through the entire document, word by word.
Bookmarks are especially useful and can be
created from document headings.
10Document language
- Specifying the document language in a PDF enables
some screen readers to switch to the appropriate
language.
11Security that doesnt interfere with assistive
software
- Some authors of PDFs restrict users from
printing, copying, extracting, adding comments
to, or editing text. - The text of an accessible PDF must be available
to a screen reader. You can use Acrobat to ensure
that security settings dont interfere with a
screen readers ability to convert the on-screen
text to speech.
12Related Information
- Check and correct reading order
- Workflow for creating accessible PDF forms
- Add alternative text and supplementary
information to tags - Set the document language
- Prevent security settings from interfering with
screen readers - Check accessibility with Full Check
13PDF Tags
- When people talk about "accessible" PDF files,
they usually are referring to "tagged" PDF files,
even though there is more to an accessible PDF
than tags. - PDF tags provide a hidden structured, textual
representation of the PDF content that is
presented to screen readers. - They exist for accessibility purposes only and
have no visible effect on the PDF file.
14HTML and PDF Tags
- HTML tags and PDF tags often use similar tag
names (e.g., both have tags named h1) and
organization structures, but they really are
quite different. - If you are comfortable with HTML, you will
probably have an easier time creating and editing
tagged PDF files.
15About tags, accessibility, reading order, and
reflow
- PDF tags are similar in many ways to XML tags.
PDF tags indicate document structure which text
is a heading, which content makes up a section,
which text is a bookmark, and so on. - A logical structure tree of tags represents the
organizational structure of the document. - Thus tags can indicate the precise reading order
and improve navigationparticularly for longer,
more complex documentswithout changing the
appearance of the PDF.
16Tags Continued
- For people who are unable to see or interpret the
visual appearance of a document, assistive
software can determine how to present and
interpret the content of the document by using
the logical structure tree. - Most assistive software depends on document
structure tags to determine the appropriate
reading order of text and to convey the meaning
of images and other content in an alternative
format, such as sound.
17Untagged Documents
- In an untagged document, there is no such
structure information, and Acrobat must infer a
structure based on the Reading Order preference
setting, which often results in page items being
read in the wrong order or not at all.
18Reflow
- Reflowing a document for viewing on the small
screen of a mobile device relies on these same
document structure tags.
19Does the Document Contain Tags?
- Often, Acrobat tags PDFs when you create them.
- To determine whether a PDF contains tags, choose
File gt Properties, and look at the Tagged PDF
value in the Advanced pane of the Description
tab. - The logical structure tree appears on the Tags
tab and shows document content as page elements
nested at various levels.
20Checking the accessibility of PDFs
- About accessibility checkers
- Check accessibility with Quick Check
- Check accessibility with Full Check
- View Full Check results
21About accessibility checkers
- You can still use any of several methods provided
by Acrobat for checking the accessibility of a
PDF. - Use Quick Check to check for document structure
tags, searchable text, and appropriate security
settings for accessibility. This method is often
the best way to check for accessibility before
attempting to use a PDF. - Use Full Check to perform a more thorough check
for many characteristics of accessible PDFs, such
as the use of fonts that can be mapped reliably
to Unicode text.
22Reflow
- Use Reflow view to quickly check reading order.
- Use Read Out Loud to experience the document as
it will be experienced by readers who use this
text-to-speech conversion tool. - Save the document as accessible text and then
read the saved text file in a word-processing
application to experience the document as it will
be experienced by readers who use a braille
printer. - Use the TouchUp Reading Order tool, Tags tab, and
Content tab to examine the structure, reading
order, and contents of a PDF in detail.
23Note
- The accessibility checker tools (Quick Check and
Full Check) can help to identify areas of
documents that may be in conflict with Adobe's
interpretations of the accessibility guidelines
referenced in the application and its
documentation. - However, these tools dont check documents
against all accessibility criteria, including
those in such referenced guidelines, and Adobe
doesnt warrant that documents comply with any
specific guidelines or regulations
24Check accessibility with Quick Check
- Use Quick Check to examine a PDF to see if it has
searchable text, document structure tags, and
appropriate security settings to make it
accessible. - Press ShiftCtrl6 (Windows) or ShiftCommand6
(Mac OS). - If the document is unstructured, a message may
appear, suggesting that you change reading order
preferences.
25Check accessibility with Full Check
- Use Full Check to check a PDF for many of the
characteristics of accessible PDFs. - You can choose which kinds of accessibility
problems to look for and how you want to view the
results. - Choose Advanced gt Accessibility gt Full Check.
- Select options for how you want to view the
results, the page range to check, and which types
of accessibility problems to check for.
26More
- Click Start Checking. Note A full accessibility
check can be time-consuming. You can stop the
process by pressing the Esc key. - Consider choosing a smaller page range.You can
choose to view the results of a full
accessibility check as an HTML file or as
comments that are placed throughout the document
where the accessibility problems are detected. - Because the Full Check feature is unable to
distinguish between essential and nonessential
content types, it may report issues that dont
affect readability. Its a good idea to review
all issues to determine which ones require
correction. -
27View Full Check results
- If you choose Create Accessibility Report in the
Accessibility Full Check dialog box, you can
specify a folder where you want the report to be
saved. When the full check is complete, the
accessibility report appears in the navigation
pane and is also saved in the folder indicated.
The name of the report file is the same as that
of the source PDF, except that .pdf is replaced
by PDF.html. - Choose Advanced gt Accessibility gt Open
Accessibility Report. - Select the HTML file, and then click OK. The
report appears in the navigation pane. - Links in the accessibility report take you to the
location of inaccessible elements in the document
pane or to procedures that briefly explain how to
fix accessibility problems.
28Note
- Note If you want to reopen the accessibility
report with the associated PDF, dont move or
rename either file after running the full check.
The HTML file refers to the PDF file with a
relative path.
29- Create Accessibility Report
- Creates an HTML report of accessibility issues,
which is opened in the navigation pane and saved
in the location indicated by the Folder field. -
- Include Repair Hints In Accessibility Report
- Adds suggestions for fixing accessibility
problems to HTML report or comments. -
- Create Comments In Document
- Adds comments to the document that indicate
accessibility problems. - Delete all accessibility comments from the PDF
after you repair the accessibility issues. -
- Page Range
- The range of pages to check.
-
- Name
- The set of accessibility criteria to check. For
the Section 508 and W3C guidelines, the options
area includes a Browse button that links to the
website for the respective guidelines. Select
Adobe PDF to choose from options for the Adobe
PDF accessibility standard - Alternative Descriptions Are Provided
- Checks for tagged figures that are missing
alternative text. -
- Text Language Is Specified
30Features for accessible reading of PDFs
- Preferences and commands to optimize output for
assistive software and devices, such as saving as
accessible text for a braille printer - Preferences and commands to make navigation of
PDFs more accessible, such as automatic scrolling
and opening PDFs to the last page read - Accessibility Setup Assistant for easy setting of
most preferences related to accessibility - Keyboard alternatives to mouse actions
- Reflow capability to temporarily present the text
of a PDF in a single easy-to-read column - Read Out Loud text-to-speech conversion
- Support for screen readers and screen magnifiers
31Features for creating accessible PDFs
- Creation of tagged PDFs from authoring
applications - Conversion of untagged PDFs to tagged PDFs
- Security setting that allows screen readers to
access text while preventing users from copying,
printing, editing, and extracting text - Ability to add text to scanned pages to improve
accessibility
32More features
- Tools for editing reading order and document
structure (Acrobat Professional only) - Tools for creating accessible PDF forms (Acrobat
Professional only) - Though Acrobat Standard provides some
functionality for making existing PDFs
accessible, you must use Acrobat Professional to
perform certain taskssuch as editing reading
order or editing document structure tagsthat may
be necessary to make some PDF documents and forms
accessible.
33Setting accessibility preferences
- Acrobat provides several preferences that help
make the reading of PDFs more accessible for
visually impaired and motion-impaired users,
including preferences that control how PDFs
appear on the screen and are read by a screen
reader. - Most preferences related to accessibility are
available through the Accessibility Setup
Assistant, which provides on-screen instructions
for setting these preferences. Some preferences
that affect accessibility arent available
through the Accessibility Setup Assistant these
include preferences in the Reading, Forms, and
Multimedia categories. You can set all
preferences in the Preferences dialog box.
34Names for Preferences
- The names shown for some preferences in the
Accessibility Setup Assistant are different from
the names for the same preferences shown in the
Preferences dialog box. Acrobat Help uses the
names shown in the Preferences dialog box. - For more information about accessibility features
in Acrobat and PDF, visit the accessibility page
of the Adobe website.
35Navigate and control the application with the
keyboard
- You can navigate by using the keyboard instead of
the mouse. Several keyboard access features are
available on Mac OS see the documentation for
your operating system for details. On Windows,
some of the keyboard shortcuts used to navigate
in Acrobat may differ from those used in other
Windows applications. - When you open Acrobat within a web browser,
keyboard commands are mapped to the web browser
first. Consequently, some keyboard shortcuts may
not be available for Acrobat or may be available
only after you shift the focus to the PDF. - For information on accessibility features for
navigating Acrobat and PDF documents with the
keyboard, visit the accessibility page of the
Adobe website.
36Scroll automatically
- The automatic scrolling feature makes it easier
to scan through long PDFs, especially reflowed
documents. You can scroll through pages without
using keystrokes or mouse actions. - Choose View gt Automatically Scroll.
- Do any of the following
- To change the scrolling speed to a specific
speed, press a number key (9 for fastest, 0 for
slowest). - To increase or decrease the scrolling speed,
press the Up Arrow or Down Arrow key, depending
on the direction of scrolling. - To reverse the direction of scrolling, press the
hyphen or minus sign key. - To jump to the next or previous page, press the
Left Arrow or Right Arrow key. - To stop automatic scrolling, press Esc or choose
View gt Automatically Scroll again.
37Save as accessible text for a braille printer
- Note This document uses the term braille
printer to refer to any device that is used to
convert accessible text to a form that can be
used by a person with blindness or low vision. - You can save a PDF as accessible text to print on
a braille printer. Accessible text can be
imported and printed out as formatted grade 1 or
2 braille documents by using a braille
translation application. See the documentation
included with the braille translator for more
information. - A text version of a PDF contains no images or
multimedia objects, although the text version of
an accessible PDF contains alternative text
descriptions for such objects. - Choose File gt Save As.
- Choose Text (Accessible) from the Save As Type
(Windows) or Format (Mac OS) menu.
38Reflow a PDF
- You can reflow a PDF to temporarily present it as
a single column that is the width of the document
pane. This reflow view can make the document
easier to read on the small screen of a mobile
device or on a standard monitor at a large
magnification, without the need to scroll
horizontally to read each line of text. - You cannot save, edit, or print a document while
it is in Reflow view. - In most cases, only readable text appears in the
reflow view. Text that doesnt reflow includes
forms, comments, digital signature fields, and
page artifacts, such as page numbers, headers,
and footers. Pages that contain both readable
text and form or digital signature fields dont
reflow. Vertical text reflows horizontally.
39Reflowing an Untagged Document
- Acrobat temporarily tags an untagged document
before reflowing it. As an author, you can
optimize your PDFs for reflow by tagging them
yourself. Tagging ensures that text blocks reflow
and that content follows the appropriate
sequences, so readers can follow a story that
spans different pages and columns without other
stories interrupting the flow. - A quick way to check the reading order of a
document is to view it in Reflow view. - If the tagged PDF doesnt reflow the way you
want, the content order or reading order of the
PDF file may contain inconsistencies, or the
tagging process itself may be the cause. You can
use the Content tab or TouchUp Reading Order tool
to resolve reflow problems. - If the problem is simply that words dont
hyphenate the way you expect them to, then you
can insert special characters to resolve the
problem. -
40Reading a PDF with a screen reader
- Acrobat supports assistive software and
devicessuch as screen readers and screen
magnifiersthat enable visually impaired users to
interact with computer applications. When
assistive software and devices are in use,
Acrobat may add temporary tags to open PDFs to
improve their readability. Use the Accessibility
Setup Assistant to improve how Acrobat interacts
with the types of assistive software and devices
that you use. When using a screen reader, you can
change your reading settings for the current
document by pressing ShiftCtrl5 (Windows) or
ShiftCommand5 (Mac OS). - See the documentation for your assistive software
or device, or contact the vendor for more
information about system requirements,
compatibility requirements, and instructions for
using this software or device with Acrobat.
41Read a PDF with Read Out Loud
- The Read Out Loud feature reads aloud the text in
a PDF, including the text in comments and
alternative text descriptions for images and
fillable fields. In tagged PDFs, content is read
in the order in which it appears in the
documents logical structure tree. In untagged
documents, the reading order is inferred, unless
a reading order has been specified in the Reading
preferences. - Read Out Loud uses the available voices installed
on your system. If you have SAPI 4 or SAPI 5
voices installed from text-to-speech or language
applications, you can choose them to read your
PDFs. - Note Read Out Loud isnt a screen reader, and
some operating systems may not support it.
42Workflow for creating accessible PDFs
- At a high level, the process of creating
accessible PDFs consists of a few basic stages - Consider accessibility before you convert a
document to PDF. - Add fillable form fields and descriptions, and
set the tab order. - Tag the PDF.
- Add other accessibility features to the PDF.
- Evaluate the PDF and repair tagging problems.
43N.B.
- Though these stages are presented in an order
that suits most needs, you may perform tasks in
these stages in a different order or iterate
between some of the stages. In all cases, you
should first examine the document, determine its
intended purpose, and use that analysis to
determine the workflow that you apply. - Consider accessibility before you convert a
document to PDF. - Whenever possible, think about accessibility when
you create the source files in an authoring
application, such as a word-processing or
page-layout application.
44Authoring Application
- Typical tasks to do in the authoring application
include adding alternative text to graphics,
optimizing tables, and applying paragraph styles
or other document-structure features that can be
converted to tags. For more information, see
Creating a tagged PDF from an authoring
application. - Note If you intend to design PDF forms, Adobe
recommends using LiveCycle Designer, which is
dedicated to the design of interactive and static
forms. LiveCycle Designer adds structure tags to
forms, improving accessibility.
45Add fillable form fields and descriptions, and
set the tab order
- If your document includes form fields, you must
make form fields interactive (fillable) and
include descriptions for the form fields. Use
Forms gt Run Form Fields Recognition to
automatically detect form fields and make them
fillable. - Acrobat Professional has a Forms toolbar that
provides numerous tools for creating fillable
form fields, such as buttons, check boxes, list
boxes, and text boxes. When you create a field,
you can type a description for it in the Tooltip
box in the General tab of the fields Properties
dialog box. Screen readers will read this text
aloud to the user. You can also use the TouchUp
Reading Order tool to add descriptions to form
fields.
46Tagging the PDF
- Improve the accessibility of PDFs by adding and
editing tags in Acrobat Professional. If a PDF
doesnt contain tags, Acrobat may attempt to tag
it automatically when users read or reflow it,
and the results may be disappointing. If you
provide users with a tagged PDF, the logical
structure tree sends the contents to a screen
reader or other assistive software or hardware in
an appropriate order. - For best results, tag a document when converting
it to PDF from an authoring application.
Alternatively, you can tag a PDF any time in
Acrobat Professional. - Tagging during conversion to PDF requires an
authoring application that supports tagging in
PDF. Tagging during conversion enables the
authoring application to draw from the source
documents paragraph styles or other structural
information to produce a logical structure tree
that reflects an accurate reading order and
appropriate levels of tags. This tagging can more
readily interpret the structure of complex
layouts, such as embedded sidebars, closely
spaced columns, irregular text alignment, and
tables. Tagging during conversion can also
properly tag the links, cross-references,
bookmarks, and alternative text (when available)
that are in the file.
47Tagging
- To tag a PDF in Acrobat Professional, use the Add
Tags To Document command. This command works on
any untagged PDF, such as one created with Adobe
PDF Printer. Acrobat Professional analyzes the
content of the PDF to interpret the individual
page elements, their hierarchical structure, and
the intended reading order of each page, and then
builds a tag tree that reflects that information.
It also creates tags for any links,
cross-references, and bookmarks that you added to
the document in Acrobat. - Though the Add Tags To Document command
adequately tags most standard layouts, it cannot
always correctly interpret the structure and
reading order of complex page elements, such as
closely spaced columns, irregular text alignment,
nonfillable form fields, and tables that dont
have borders. Tagging these pages by using the
Add Tags To Document command can result in
improperly combined elements or out-of-sequence
tags that cause reading order problems in the
PDF.
48Tags Panel
- The Tags panel allows you to view, reorder,
rename, modify, delete, and create tags. - To view the Tags panel, select View gt Show/Hide gt
Navigation Panes gt Tags. - After expanding ltTagsgt and ltSectgt, a long list of
tags should be visible. - The list can be navigated, expanded, and
collapsed using a mouse or keyboard.
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50Many of the tags are similar, if not identical to
HTML
- below
- Tag Stands for
- ltH1gt to ltH6gt Heading
- ltPgt Paragraph
- ltLgt List
- Description/Note
- Similar to ltulgt or ltolgt in HTML
- ltLIgt List Item
- Should be nested just as in HTML, which can get
very confusing.
51- Tag Stands for
- ltTablegt, ltTHgt, Table, Table Row
- ltTRgt, and ltTDgt, Table Header, Table Data
- ltFiguregt Figure
- Description/Note
- Similar to ltimggt tag in HTML
52Highlight content
- One of the first things you should do in the tags
panel is to select the Highlight Content in the
Options ( ) menu. When this option is checked,
selecting a tag should highlight the
corresponding text, image, or other element in
the PDF file.
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54Find Tag From Selection
- Just as selecting a tag highlights the content in
the body of the PDF file, there is a way to
accomplish the opposite effect of highlighting
the tag that corresponds to selected content. - First, click on the Select Tool .
- Next, select a portion of text, an image, or a
table. - Finally, select the Options menu at the top of
the Tags panel and then select Find Tag From
Selection. This will highlight the tag or tags
that contain the content you previously selected.
55Change tags
- At times, you will encounter a PDF file that
contains incorrect tags. - You can modify these by right-clicking the tag
you want to change by selecting Properties, then
the Tag tab, and then selecting the appropriate
new tag type from the dropdown list labeled Type.
- For example, to change a tag from ltNormalgt to
ltH1gt, select the ltNormalgt tag you want to change
and do the following - Right click the tag and select Properties and
select Heading Level 1 from the list labeled Type.
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57Add tags to an untagged document
- If you do not see any tags in the tags panel,
your document is untagged, and you will need to
tag the file. - To add tags to an untagged document, choose Tools
from the right-hand menu, then select
Accessibility gt Add Tags to Document. - This process can sometimes be extremely
time-consuming, and you will almost certainly
have to edit some of the tags. - Still, it is a start and will probably be faster
than doing all the work manually. This is
especially true if the document contains tables.
58Evaluate the PDF and repair tagging problems.
- Once you have a tagged PDF, you must evaluate the
document for reading order problems, tagging
errors, and accessibility errors, and then repair
them as needed. - No matter which method you use to tag the PDF,
youll probably need to use Acrobat Professional
to touch up the tagging and reading order for
complex page layouts or unusual page elements.
59- For example, the Add Tags To Document feature
cant always distinguish between instructive
figures and decorative page elements such as
borders, lines, or background elements. It may
incorrectly tag all of these as figures.
Similarly, the Add Tags To Document feature may
erroneously tag graphical characters within
textsuch as drop capsas figures instead of
including them in the tag that represents the
rest of the text block. Such errors can clutter
the tag tree and complicate the reading order
that assistive technology relies on. - If you tag a document from within Acrobat
Professional, the application generates an error
report after it completes the tagging process.
You can use this report to guide you as you
repair tagging problems. You can identify other
tagging, reading order, and accessibility
problems for any PDF in Acrobat Professional by
using the Full Check tool or the TouchUp Reading
Order tool.
60Create a tagged PDF from a web page
- A PDF that you create from a web page is only as
accessible as the HTML source that it is based
on. For example, if the web page relies on tables
for its layout design (as many web pages do), the
HTML code for the table may not flow in the same
logical reading order as a tagged PDF would
require, even though the HTML code is
sufficiently structured to display all the
elements correctly in a browser. - Depending on the complexity of the web page, you
may need to do extensive repairs by using the
TouchUp Reading Order tool or editing the tag
tree in Acrobat Professional. - To produce the most accessible PDFs from web
pages you create, first establish a logical
reading order in their HTML code. For best
results, employ the Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines that are published by the World Wide
Web Consortium (W3C). The guidelines are
available on the W3C website at www.w3.org.
61Choose File
- Choose File gt Create PDF gt From Web Page.
- For URL, type the address of the web page, or
navigate to the web page location. - Click Settings.
- In the General tab, select Create PDF Tags, and
then click OK. - Select any other options as appropriate, and then
click Create.
62- Creating a tagged PDF from an authoring
application - In most cases, you create tagged PDFs from within
an authoring application, such as Adobe
FrameMaker, Adobe InDesign, or Microsoft Word.
Creating tags in the authoring application
generally provides better results than adding
tags in Acrobat. - PDFMaker provides conversion settings that let
you create tagged PDFs in Microsoft Excel,
PowerPoint, and Word. - For an in-depth guide to creating accessible
PDFs, visit the accessibility page of the Adobe
website. - For more information, see the documentation for
your authoring application.
63About tags in combined PDFs
- You can combine multiple files from different
applications in one operation to create a single
PDF. For example, you can combine word-processing
files with slide presentations, spreadsheets, and
web pages. - During conversion, Acrobat opens each authoring
application, creates a tagged PDF, and assembles
these PDFs into a single tagged PDF. - The conversion process doesnt always correctly
interpret the document structure for the combined
PDF, because the files being assembled often use
different formats. Because you may need to modify
the reading order and tag tree of the combined
document, you may need to use Acrobat
Professional to create an accessible PDF from
multiple documents. - When you combine multiple PDFs into one tagged
PDF, start with all untagged PDFs or all tagged
PDFs. Combining tagged and untagged PDFs results
in a partially tagged PDF that isnt accessible
to people with disabilities some userssuch as
those using screen readerswill be completely
unaware of the pages that dont have tags. If you
start with a mix of tagged and untagged PDFs, tag
the untagged files before proceeding. If the PDFs
are all untagged, add tags to the combined PDF
after you finish inserting, replacing, and
deleting pages. - Keep in mind that when you insert, replace, or
delete pages, Acrobat accepts existing tags into
the tag tree of the consolidated PDF in the
following manner - When you insert pages into a PDF, Acrobat adds
the tags (if any) for the new pages to the end of
the tag tree, even if you insert the new pages at
the beginning or the middle of the document. - When you replace pages in a PDF, Acrobat adds the
tags (if any) from the incoming pages to the end
of the tag tree, even if you replace pages at the
beginning or the middle of the document. Acrobat
retains the tags (if any) for the replaced pages.
- When you delete pages from a PDF, Acrobat retains
the tags (if any) of the deleted pages. - Pages whose tags are out of order in the logical
structure tree can cause problems for screen
readers. Screen readers read tags in sequence
down the tree, and therefore they might not reach
the tags for an inserted page until the end of
the tree. To fix this problem, youd use Acrobat
Professional to rearrange the tag tree to put
large groups of tags in the same reading order as
the pages themselves. To avoid the need for this
advanced step, plan so that you always insert
pages to the end of a PDF, building the document
from front to back in sequence. For example, if
you create a title page PDF separately from the
PDF that contains the body of the text, add the
body PDF to the title page PDF, even though the
body document is much larger to process. This
approach puts the tags for the body of the text
after the tags for the title page, and eliminates
the need for you to rearrange the tags later in
Acrobat Professional. - The tags that remain from a deleted or replaced
page dont connect to any content in the
document. Essentially, they are large pieces of
empty tag tree sections. These unneeded tags
increase the file size of the document, slow down
screen readers, and can make screen readers
present confusing results. You should use Acrobat
Professional to delete the tags of deleted pages
from the tag tree. - For more information, see Create merged PDFs and
PDF packages.
64TouchUp Reading Order
- The TouchUp Reading Order tool allows a user to
quickly add and edit PDF tags and view the
reading order of elements on the page. - Although it can speed up the tagging process, it
does not take the place of the other tools
mentioned previously. - To use the TouchUp Reading Order tool, select
Tools from the right-hand menu, then select
Accessibility gt TouchUp Reading Order. - When this feature is selected, the view on the
screen changes. All of the content is enclosed in
numbered boxes. - Each of these boxes represent a tag and the
number corresponds with the tag number in the
Order panel. The TouchUp Reading Order window
will also open.
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66Note
- You will notice a group of buttons with the names
of several common tags. You can use these buttons
to assign tags to a selected block of text or an
object. - TouchUp Reading Order is not perfect. Selecting
text is difficult and many tags are not
supported. It is also somewhat difficult to
assign alternate text to images. Still, it is
easier to mark up a PDF file using this feature
than any other way
67Adding/Changing tags
- There are two ways to select an area of text,
image, table, or other element using TouchUp
Reading Order. - Drag a box around an element using the crosshairs
that have replaced the default pointer. - It is sometimes difficult to select exactly the
right area, but it is a little easier if you try
drawing a box that is slightly larger than the
element. - Once you have selected a new element, you can
assign some of the most common tags to that
element by clicking on one of the several
buttons.
68Also
- You can also select everything within a box by
clicking on the number in the top-left corner. - Now that you have selected the text, you can
assign a tag by clicking on the corresponding
button. - Once you select a button, Acrobat will place the
selected content in the appropriate tag. If you
have the Tags panel open, you can view these
changes instantly. - While in TouchUp Reading Order, you can also
assign alternate text to images by Right-clicking
on the image and choosing Edit Alternate Text.
69Button Adobe Tag Additional Information
Text ltPgt
Form Field ltFormgt
Heading 1 ltH1gt
Heading 2 ltH2gt
Heading 3 ltH3gt
Figure ltFiguregt
70Button Adobe Tag Additional Information
Figure/Caption ltFiguregt ltCaptiongt If you select the image and the nearby caption image will be tagged as a figure and the text will be tagged as its caption.
Table ltTablegt, ltTRgt, ltTHgt, and ltTDgt Acrobat attempts to assign rows, columns, and headings. Sometimes it does this correctly, but this should still be checked with the table inspector.
Cell ltTDgt Can be used to merge cells if they are incorrectly split.
Formula ltFormulagt
Background none Also called an artifact, this will hide an item completely from a screen reader.
71Add other accessibility features to the PDF.
- This stage includes setting the document
language, making sure that security settings
dont interfere with screen readers, creating
accessible links, and adding bookmarks.
72The Creation of PDFs
- PDF files are not typically created in Acrobat.
They are usually created in another program and
converted to PDF. - There are dozens or probably hundreds of programs
that can create PDF files, but very few of them
produce tagged PDF files.
73Applications to Create Accessible PDFs
- If you are using Microsoft Word or PowerPoint,
OpenOffice.org Writer, or Adobe tools such as
InDesign, you can often create accessible, tagged
PDF files without opening Acrobat. - Of course, the accessibility of the PDF depends
on the accessibility of the original document.
74MS Word
- The majority of the PDF files on the web were
probably created in Microsoft Word. The good news
is that it is possible to create accessible PDF
files in Office, as long as the following
requirements are met - The file must be accessible. That includes
providing alternative text for images, proper
headings, appropriate link text, etc. For more
information, read our tutorial on Microsoft Word.
75- Office 2000-2003 users must have Acrobat
installed, as well as the add-in. Office 2007
users must have either Acrobat or the Microsoft
PDF add-in installed. Office 2010 users can
create tagged PDF files natively or with the
Adobe add-in. - The file must be exported correctly. If a file is
created by printing to PDF, it will not be
correctly tagged.
76In MS-Word 2007
- Before you save the file, select Options and
ensure that the Document structure tags for
accessibility option is selected.
77Note
78Or you can select Create PDF from the Acrobat
ribbon.
The program should create a tagged PDF file by
default. If this is not the case select Adobe PDF
conversion options and ensure that Create
Accessible (Tagged) PDF file is selected
79Word 2000-2003
- When you install Adobe Acrobat, an add-in for
Microsoft Office is installed by default. The
add-in allows you to convert Office files to PDF
without opening Acrobat. This add-in also
installs an Adobe PDF menu, which should appear
in the Menu bar. - To convert a Word Document to PDF, Select Adobe
PDF gt Convert to Adobe PDF. - If your document is correctly structured, this
should automatically create a tagged PDF. To
ensure that files are being converted correctly,
go to Adobe PDF gt Change Conversion Settings and
ensure Enable Accessibility and Reflow with
tagged Adobe PDF is selected.
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81Convert to PDF in Acrobat
- If you are having trouble converting a document
to tagged PDF in Office, or if you want to merge
multiple documents into one tagged PDF file, you
can convert a file to PDF in Acrobat. - There are several ways to do this one of the
easiest is to select File gt Create PDF gt From
File (in Acrobat X, File gt Create gt PDF From
File). - If the file format is supported (i.e. the file is
created in a Microsoft or Adobe product), the
file should be tagged as it is converted. - If no tags are present, select Edit gt Preferences
gt Convert to PDF, choose the correct format,
select Conversions Settings, and ensure that
Enable accessibility and reflow is selected.
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83Order Panel
- The order panel allows you to change the reading
order of the content on the page so it matches
the visual reading order. To open the Order
panel, select or View gt Show/Hide gt Navigation
Panes gtOrder or select Show Order Panel in the
TouchUp Reading Order tool.
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85- At first glance, it resembles the Tags panel, but
there are a few differences. - The document is divided into pages.
- Each element is numbered, and the numbers start
over on each page. - There is no hierarchy of elements everything is
on the same level. - These differences help make the Order panel a
much easier way to reorder tags. To change the
reading order of an element, just click and drag
the tag to the location that reflects the correct
reading order. This new order will be reflected
in the Tags panel and when the document is viewed
in Reflow mode.
86Alternative text
- The easiest way to add alternative text is with
the TouchUp Reading Order tool. When an image is
tagged as an image (or figure), the alternative
text will appear next to the image. If it has no
alternative text, the caption will read "Figure -
No alternate text exists."
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88- To add alternative text, Right click on the image
and select Edit Alternate Text. Enter the
appropriate alternative text in the dialog box.
89Table Inspector
- The Table Inspector allows you to easily identify
and assign scope to table headers. - With the TouchUp Reading Order tool open, select
a table and then select Table Inspector. You can
now select table cells that should be headers.
Right click on a selected cell or cells and
choose Table Cell Properties. A dialog box will
appear.
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91- If the selected cell(s) needs to be tagged as a
header, select the Header Cell option and assign
a scope of either Row or Column. After selecting
OK, you will notice that the table header cells
will be highlighted in red and the data cells
will be highlighted in gray. -
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93Artifacts
- Artifacts are elements that are ignored by a
screen reader, much like an image with empty
alternative text in HTML is ignored. Important
text should never be labeled as an artifact. As
with alternative text, the easiest way to change
an element to or from an artifact is with the
TouchUp Reading Order tool. Select the element
and press the Background button to make it an
artifact. - To search for artifacts, go to the Tags panel and
select Options gt Find. A window will appear with
several search options. Artifact is the default
search, so click Find. If there are any
artifacts, the search will identify them and
allow you to change them to other elements. - To change a tag to an artifact in the tags panel,
right click on the item and select Change Tag to
Artifact.
94Some of the main requirements for preparing
accessible PDFs
- When a paper document is scanned to create a PDF
the resulting file is a PDF Image Only file -
that is, bitmap pictures of the pages. Although
the page can be viewed with Acrobat, the content
cannot be recognised by screen readers and so is
not accessible. - To make a PDF Image Only file accessible the
document needs to be "captured" using Adobe
Acrobat Capture 3 or the paper capture facility
provided with Acrobat 6 and a tagged PDF file
created http//www.adobe.com/products/acrcapture/
main.html - Text files such as documents generated by word
processing or desktop publishing software are the
most suitable for making accessible PDFs.
95Tagged Documents
- Accessible documents must be in the tagged PDF
format and this is easiest to do with documents
generated with Microsoft Office 2000 or higher. - If you are not using Microsoft Office it may be
necessary to download the 'Make Accessible
Plug-in' from the Adobe website for Acrobat 5,
use the automatic tagging facility in Acrobat 6
and perhaps create some of the tags by hand. - Word 2000 lets you create tagged Adobe PDF files.
However the Word document must be well marked up
and use styles to format text such as headings
and paragraphs. That is, not by highlighting a
piece of text and using the font and bold options
to change its look.
96More
- Also, use styles to provide structure to the
document. Use the "spacing before" and "spacing
after" paragraph properties rather than the enter
(return) key to add space between paragraphs. - Use the Column command in Word to create columns
and the Insert Table or Draw Table tool to create
tables. - Add alternative text to all images. In Word you
can add descriptive text via the Web tab of the
pictures Properties dialogue box within the
Format menu. - All the parts of a composite image should be
grouped using the Group command. - Use the Acrobat Tags palette and the forms tool
to create accessible electronic PDF forms.
97Untagged PDF files
- Untagged PDF files such as those created with
Acrobat 4 (and earlier) can be converted into
accessible (tagged) PDF with the 'Make
Accessible' plug-in developed for Acrobat 5 or
from within Acrobat 6. Tagged files created in
this way should always be checked with a screen
reader for reading order and content sense as
well as accessibility. - Information about the 'Make Accessible' plug-in
and download are available at http//www.adobe.co
m/support/downloads/detail.jsp?hexID88de - When information is provided via a PDF, the link
to the document should include a short summary of
the information it contains, an indication of the
document size in KB file size and page number and
an estimated download time at 56 kbps.
98Is PDF Accessibility Still An Issue?
- The short answer is YES
- The commitment Adobe has made to improving the
accessibility of PDFs has been widely recognised
by disability groups and accessibility advocates
and has directly benefited many users of
assistive technologies. - The general opinion of the accessibility
community world wide however, is that the use of
PDFs on Websites still presents a significant
barrier for people with disabilities, in
particular for sight impaired Web users who rely
on screen reader technology. - In Australia, the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission has indicated that the use
of PDF documents on Websites is still a
significant accessibility issue.
99Areas of Concern 1
- The use of PDF documents on Websites raise five
possible areas of concern - Legacy documents. PDF documents generated with
early versions of Acrobat that are not accessible
and have not been converted into more accessible
PDFs. In cases where these legacy documents are
no longer relevant the simplest solution to this
problem is their removal from the site. - Scanned documents. PDF Image Only files created
by scanning an existing printed document are
often very hard to make accessible. - Unused accessibility enhancements. The enhanced
accessibility of PDFs generated with recent
versions of Adobe Acrobat is only achievable when
the accessibility features are used
appropriately.
100More areas of Concern 2
- Lack of accessible PDF support by all operating
systems. Currently full accessibility support is
only available for 32-bit Windows environments. - Variable assistive technology support for PDFs.
Accessibility of PDFs by assistive technologies
depends on the manufacturers of those
technologies incorporating PDF support into their
products. Several manufacturers have done this
with recent versions of their products, but for
the many users of earlier versions of the
technology PDFs will remain inaccessible. - In 2004, the use of PDFs can still cause
accessibility problems for some Web users.
However over the next few years, the extent of
this problem is likely to diminish as older PDFs
are removed from Websites, more accessible PDFs
are produced and an increasing number of
assistive technology users upgrade their devices.
101Alternatives for PDF Content
- PDFs are a non-standard W3C format that requires
the Acrobat browser plug-in to access the
information contained in the document. Even
though recent advances mean that it is now
possible to create a PDF document that can be
accessed by a greater number of people, PDFs
should not be considered accessible in terms of
the W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. - Accessibility enhanced PDFs still can't be
accessed by a range of web users including - People who are unable to install the Acrobat
reader software. - People with slow connection speeds who are not
willing to install Acrobat. - People who use operating systems and browsers
that do not support PDF. - People with assistive technology versions that do
not support PDF.
102If it cannot be done
- "If after best efforts, you cannot create an
accessible page, provide a link to an alternative
page that uses W3C technologies, is accessible,
has equivalent information (or functionality),
and is updated as often as the inaccessible
(original) page."WCAG Checkpoint 11.4 In most
cases, the text information contained in a PDF
was originally generated in some other format,
commonly MS Word or Excel. This original source
material can be used (and where necessary
modified) to create an equivalent alternative for
the information provided in the PDF - The ideal accessible alternative for content
provided in a PDF file is an equivalent HTML page
that is both valid and accessible.
103RTF
- Where a HTML alternative is not possible, the
information should be provided in text format
(RTF) and failing this as a Word or Excel
document. In these cases, descriptions should be
provided for information conveyed via charts,
graphs and images. - Where it is not possible to provide an accessible
online alternative for some content, for example
a complex form or detailed geographic map,
contact details such as a phone number and/or
email address should be provided so that someone
who is unable to access the PDF can still obtain
the information in contains.
104References and Additional Information
- Maximum Accessibility Making Your Web Site More
Usable for Everyone. John Slatin and Sharron
Rush, 2003. Addison-Wesley, Boston. - Adobe Acrobat Solutions for Accessibility. Adobe
- How to Create Accessible Adobe PDF Files. Adobe
- Is PDF Accessible? AccessIT (National Center on
Accessible Information Technology in Education,
University of Washington) - Adobe Acrobat Accessibility Techniques. WebAim
- Quick reference for Adobe Acrobat 5.0 and 6.0.
University of Wisconsin-Madison - Accessibility of PDF Documents. Jim Byrne, MCU
Accessible web design consultancy. - PDF and Public Documents A White Paper, Janina
Sajka and Joe Roeder. American Foundation for the
Blind - World Wide Web Access Disability Discrimination
Act Advisory Notes. Australian Human Rights and
Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC)
105- http//www.w3.org/WAI/GL/WCAG-PDF-TECHS-20010913/
- http//macromedia.com/accessibility/products/acrob
at/training.html