1.3.1 – Info and Relationships
Provide users with content that has clear structure and relationships.
All users benefit when your website structure is logical and each section of content has a clear relationship with the content around it. Visual cues like headings, bullet points, line breaks, tables, bolding, underlining links and other formatting choices help users understand the content.
Assistive technology often relies on correct formatting and logical structures to work. When a user experiences the site through a screen reader, other assistive technology or without CSS they should still understand the content.
How to Pass
Complying with the need for good structure and formatting is a wide-ranging target. Half-measures don’t work, so you can’t use subheadings properly and then throw random bullet points all over the place.
Amongst other things, you must:
Break up content with subheadings for new sections
Mark headings with HTML header tags
Use lists, tables and other formats where needed
Use the correct HTML for all structural elements
Use valid HTML everywhere
Use clear labels and alternative text on forms
Tips
Ensuring that your web pages have an accessible structure is at once a simple and complex task. The level of difficulty depends on the complexity of your website; a page with several levels of headings will take more work than a single-topic blog post.
An efficient way to check your markup is to use an HTML validator. This will tell you if the web page structure has any HTML errors – these errors won’t always equate to accessibility flaws but the cleaner your code the better. Errors like improperly closed paragraph tags are easily remedied.
After using the validator, check pages manually for correctly nested headings and other more visible page elements. Manually check that any forms you use are labelled clearly too, simple things like required field asterisks that lack explanation can cause big problems.
Now you’ve read up on 1.3.1 - Info and Relationships, join the discussion at wuhcag.com. The Wuhcag community is always on hand to help with questions and we’d love to learn your tips and tricks for this guideline.