summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc')
-rw-r--r--doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc624
1 files changed, 624 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc b/doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7f1a2b1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/frameworks-technologies/accessible.qdoc
@@ -0,0 +1,624 @@
+/****************************************************************************
+**
+** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
+** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
+**
+** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
+**
+** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
+** No Commercial Usage
+** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed.
+** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions
+** contained in the either Technology Preview License Agreement or the
+** Beta Release License Agreement.
+**
+** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
+** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser
+** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software
+** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the
+** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
+** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements
+** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html.
+**
+** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain
+** additional rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL
+** Exception version 1.0, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this
+** package.
+**
+** GNU General Public License Usage
+** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU
+** General Public License version 3.0 as published by the Free Software
+** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.GPL included in the
+** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
+** ensure the GNU General Public License version 3.0 requirements will be
+** met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html.
+**
+** If you are unsure which license is appropriate for your use, please
+** contact the sales department at http://qt.nokia.com/contact.
+** $QT_END_LICENSE$
+**
+****************************************************************************/
+
+/*!
+ \group accessibility
+ \title Accessibility Classes
+*/
+
+/*!
+ \page accessible.html
+ \title Accessibility
+
+ \ingroup frameworks-technologies
+
+ \tableofcontents
+
+ \section1 Introduction
+
+ Accessibility in computer software is making applications usable
+ for people with disabilities. This could be achieved by providing
+ keyboard shortcuts, a high-contrast user interface that uses
+ specially selected colors and fonts, or support for assistive tools
+ such as screen readers and braille displays.
+
+ An application does not usually communicate directly with
+ assistive tools but through an assistive technology, which is a
+ bridge for exchange of information between the applications and
+ the tools. Information about user interface elements, such
+ as buttons and scroll bars, is exposed to the assistive technologies.
+ Qt supports Microsoft Active Accessibility (MSAA) on Windows and
+ Mac OS X Accessibility on Mac OS X.
+ On Unix/X11, support is preliminary. The individual technologies
+ are abstracted from Qt, and there is only a single interface to
+ consider. We will use MSAA throughout this document when we need
+ to address technology related issues.
+
+ In this overview document, we will examine the overall Qt
+ accessibility architecture, and how to implement accessibility for
+ custom widgets and elements.
+
+ \section1 Architecture
+
+ Providing accessibility is a collaboration between accessibility
+ compliant applications, the assistive technology, and the
+ assistive tools.
+
+ \image accessibilityarchitecture.png
+
+ Accessibility compliant applications are called AT-Servers while
+ assistive tools are called AT-Clients. A Qt application will
+ typically be an AT-Server, but specialized programs might also
+ function like AT-Clients. We will refer to clients and servers
+ when talking about AT-Clients and AT-Servers in the rest of this
+ document.
+
+ We will from now on focus on the Qt accessibility interface and
+ how it is implemented to create Qt applications that support
+ accessibility.
+
+ \section2 Accessibility in Qt
+
+ These classes provide support for accessible applications.
+
+ \annotatedlist accessibility
+
+ When we communicate with the assistive technologies, we need to
+ describe Qt's user interface in a way that they can understand. Qt
+ applications use QAccessibleInterface to expose information about the
+ individual UI elements. Currently, Qt provides support for its widgets
+ and widget parts, e.g., slider handles, but the interface could
+ also be implemented for any QObject if necessary. QAccessible
+ contains enums that describe the UI. The description is mainly
+ based on MSAA and is independent of Qt. We will examine the enums
+ in the course of this document.
+
+ The structure of the UI is represented as a tree of
+ QAccessibleInterface subclasses. You can think of this as a
+ representation of a UI like the QObject tree built by Qt. Objects
+ can be widgets or widget parts (such as scroll bar handles). We
+ examine the tree in detail in the next section.
+
+ Servers notify clients through \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}
+ about changes in objects by sending events, and the clients
+ register to receive the events. The available events are defined
+ by the QAccessible::Event enum. The clients may then query for
+ the object that generated the event through
+ QAccessible::queryAccessibleInterface().
+
+ Three of the enums in QAccessible help clients query and alter
+ accessible objects:
+
+ \list
+ \o \l{QAccessible::}{Role}: Describes the role the object
+ fills in the user interface, e.g., if it is a main
+ window, a text caret, or a cell in an item view.
+ \o \l{QAccessible::}{Action}: The actions that the
+ clients can perform on the objects, e.g., pushing a
+ button.
+ \o \l{QAccessible::}{Relation}: Describes the relationship
+ between objects in the object tree.
+ This is used for navigation.
+ \endlist
+
+ The clients also have some possibilities to get the content of
+ objects, e.g., a button's text; the object provides strings
+ defined by the QAccessible::Text enum, that give information
+ about content.
+
+ The objects can be in a number of different states as defined by
+ the \l{QAccessible::}{State} enum. Examples of states are whether
+ the object is disabled, if it has focus, or if it provides a pop-up
+ menu.
+
+ \section2 The Accessible Object Tree
+
+ As mentioned, a tree structure is built from the accessible
+ objects of an application. By navigating through the tree, the
+ clients can access all elements in the UI. Object relations give
+ clients information about the UI. For instance, a slider handle is
+ a child of the slider to which it belongs. QAccessible::Relation
+ describes the various relationships the clients can ask objects
+ for.
+
+ Note that there are no direct mapping between the Qt QObject tree
+ and the accessible object tree. For instance, scroll bar handles
+ are accessible objects but are not widgets or objects in Qt.
+
+ AT-Clients have access to the accessibility object tree through
+ the root object in the tree, which is the QApplication. They can
+ query other objects through QAccessible::navigate(), which fetches
+ objects based on \l{QAccessible::}{Relation}s. The children of any
+ node is 1-based numbered. The child numbered 0 is the object
+ itself. The children of all interfaces are numbered this way,
+ i.e., it is not a fixed numbering from the root node in the entire
+ tree.
+
+ Qt provides accessible interfaces for its widgets. Interfaces for
+ any QObject subclass can be requested through
+ QAccessible::queryInterface(). A default implementation is
+ provided if a more specialized interface is not defined. An
+ AT-Client cannot acquire an interface for accessible objects that
+ do not have an equivalent QObject, e.g., scroll bar handles, but
+ they appear as normal objects through interfaces of parent
+ accessible objects, e.g., you can query their relationships with
+ QAccessible::relationTo().
+
+ To illustrate, we present an image of an accessible object tree.
+ Beneath the tree is a table with examples of object relationships.
+
+ \image accessibleobjecttree.png
+
+ The labels in top-down order are: the QAccessibleInterface class
+ name, the widget for which an interface is provided, and the
+ \l{QAccessible::}{Role} of the object. The Position, PageLeft and
+ PageRight correspond to the slider handle, the slider groove left
+ and the slider groove right, respectively. These accessible objects
+ do not have an equivalent QObject.
+
+ \table 40%
+ \header
+ \o Source Object
+ \o Target Object
+ \o Relation
+ \row
+ \o Slider
+ \o Indicator
+ \o Controller
+ \row
+ \o Indicator
+ \o Slider
+ \o Controlled
+ \row
+ \o Slider
+ \o Application
+ \o Ancestor
+ \row
+ \o Application
+ \o Slider
+ \o Child
+ \row
+ \o PushButton
+ \o Indicator
+ \o Sibling
+ \endtable
+
+ \section2 The Static QAccessible Functions
+
+ The accessibility is managed by QAccessible's static functions,
+ which we will examine shortly. They produce QAccessible
+ interfaces, build the object tree, and initiate the connection
+ with MSAA or the other platform specific technologies. If you are
+ only interested in learning how to make your application
+ accessible, you can safely skip over this section to
+ \l{Implementing Accessibility}.
+
+ The communication between clients and the server is initiated when
+ \l{QAccessible::}{setRootObject()} is called. This is done when
+ the QApplication instance is instantiated and you should not have
+ to do this yourself.
+
+ When a QObject calls \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()},
+ clients that are listening to events are notified of the
+ change. The function is used to post events to the assistive
+ technology, and accessible \l{QAccessible::Event}{events} are
+ posted by \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}.
+
+ \l{QAccessible::}{queryAccessibleInterface()} returns accessible
+ interfaces for \l{QObject}s. All widgets in Qt provide interfaces;
+ if you need interfaces to control the behavior of other \l{QObject}
+ subclasses, you must implement the interfaces yourself, although
+ the QAccessibleObject convenience class implements parts of the
+ functionality for you.
+
+ The factory that produces accessibility interfaces for QObjects is
+ a function of type QAccessible::InterfaceFactory. It is possible
+ to have several factories installed. The last factory installed
+ will be the first to be asked for interfaces.
+ \l{QAccessible::}{queryAccessibleInterface()} uses the factories
+ to create interfaces for \l{QObject}s. Normally, you need not be
+ concerned about factories because you can implement plugins that
+ produce interfaces. We will give examples of both approaches
+ later.
+
+ \section2 Enabling Accessibility Support
+
+ By default, Qt applications are run with accessibility support
+ enabled on Windows and Mac OS X. On Unix/X11 platforms, applications
+ must be launched in an environment with the \c QT_ACCESSIBILITY
+ variable set to 1. For example, this is set in the following way with
+ the bash shell:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/doc_src_qt4-accessibility.qdoc environment
+
+ Accessibility features are built into Qt by default when the libraries
+ are configured and built.
+
+ \section1 Implementing Accessibility
+
+ To provide accessibility support for a widget or other user
+ interface element, you need to implement the QAccessibleInterface
+ and distribute it in a QAccessiblePlugin. It is also possible to
+ compile the interface into the application and provide a
+ QAccessible::InterfaceFactory for it. The factory can be used if
+ you link statically or do not want the added complexity of
+ plugins. This can be an advantage if you, for instance, are
+ delivering a 3-rd party library.
+
+ All widgets and other user interface elements should have
+ interfaces and plugins. If you want your application to support
+ accessibility, you will need to consider the following:
+
+ \list
+ \o Qt already implements accessibility for its own widgets.
+ We therefore recommend that you use Qt widgets where possible.
+ \o A QAccessibleInterface needs to be implemented for each element
+ that you want to make available to accessibility clients.
+ \o You need to send accessibility events from the custom
+ user interface elements that you implement.
+ \endlist
+
+ In general, it is recommended that you are somewhat familiar with
+ MSAA, which Qt's accessibility support originally was built for.
+ You should also study the enum values of QAccessible, which
+ describe the roles, actions, relationships, and events that you
+ need to consider.
+
+ Note that you can examine how Qt's widgets implement their
+ accessibility. One major problem with the MSAA standard is that
+ interfaces are often implemented in an inconsistent way. This
+ makes life difficult for clients and often leads to guesswork on
+ object functionality.
+
+ It is possible to implement interfaces by inheriting
+ QAccessibleInterface and implementing its pure virtual functions.
+ In practice, however, it is usually preferable to inherit
+ QAccessibleObject or QAccessibleWidget, which implement part of
+ the functionality for you. In the next section, we will see an
+ example of implementing accessibility for a widget by inheriting
+ the QAccessibleWidget class.
+
+ \section2 The QAccessibleObject and QAccessibleWidget Convenience Classes
+
+ When implementing an accessibility interface for widgets, one would
+ as a rule inherit QAccessibleWidget, which is a convenience class
+ for widgets. Another available convenience class, which is
+ inherited by QAccessibleWidget, is the QAccessibleObject, which
+ implements part of the interface for QObjects.
+
+ The QAccessibleWidget provides the following functionality:
+
+ \list
+ \o It handles the navigation of the tree and
+ hit testing of the objects.
+ \o It handles events, roles, and actions that are common for all
+ \l{QWidget}s.
+ \o It handles action and methods that can be performed on
+ all widgets.
+ \o It calculates bounding rectangles with
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{rect()}.
+ \o It gives \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{text()} strings that are
+ appropriate for a generic widget.
+ \o It sets the \l{QAccessible::State}{states} that
+ are common for all widgets.
+ \endlist
+
+ \section2 QAccessibleWidget Example
+
+ Instead of creating a custom widget and implementing an interface
+ for it, we will show how accessibility can be implemented for one of
+ Qt's standard widgets: QSlider. Making this widget accessible
+ demonstrates many of the issues that need to be faced when making
+ a custom widget accessible.
+
+ The slider is a complex control that functions as a
+ \l{QAccessible::}{Controller} for its accessible children.
+ This relationship must be known by the interface (for
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{relationTo()} and
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{navigate()}). This can be done
+ using a controlling signal, which is a mechanism provided by
+ QAccessibleWidget. We do this in the constructor:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 0
+
+ The choice of signal shown is not important; the same principles
+ apply to all signals that are declared in this way. Note that we
+ use QLatin1String to ensure that the signal name is correctly
+ specified.
+
+ When an accessible object is changed in a way that users need
+ to know about, it notifies clients of the change by sending them
+ an event via the accessible interface. This is how QSlider calls
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{updateAccessibility()} to indicate that
+ its value has changed:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 0
+ \dots
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 1
+ \dots
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/qabstractsliderisnippet.cpp 2
+
+ Note that the call is made after the value of the slider has
+ changed because clients may query the new value immediately after
+ receiving the event.
+
+ The interface must be able to calculate bounding rectangles of
+ itself and any children that do not provide an interface of their
+ own. The \c QAccessibleSlider has three such children identified by
+ the private enum, \c SliderElements, which has the following values:
+ \c PageLeft (the rectangle on the left hand side of the slider
+ handle), \c PageRight (the rectangle on the right hand side of the
+ handle), and \c Position (the slider handle). Here is the
+ implementation of \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{rect()}:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 1
+ \dots
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 2
+ \dots
+
+ The first part of the function, which we have omitted, uses the
+ current \l{QStyle}{style} to calculate the slider handle's
+ bounding rectangle; it is stored in \c srect. Notice that child 0,
+ covered in the default case in the above code, is the slider itself,
+ so we can simply return the QSlider bounding rectangle obtained
+ from the superclass, which is effectively the value obtained from
+ QAccessibleWidget::rect().
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 3
+
+ Before the rectangle is returned it must be mapped to screen
+ coordinates.
+
+ The QAccessibleSlider must reimplement
+ QAccessibleInterface::childCount() since it manages children
+ without interfaces.
+
+ The \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{text()} function returns the
+ QAccessible::Text strings for the slider:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 4
+
+ The \c slider() function returns a pointer to the interface's
+ QSlider. Some values are left for the superclass's implementation.
+ Not all values are appropriate for all accessible objects, as you
+ can see for QAccessible::Value case. You should just return an
+ empty string for those values where no relevant text can be
+ provided.
+
+ The implementation of the \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{role()}
+ function is straightforward:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 5
+
+ The role function should be reimplemented by all objects and
+ describes the role of themselves and the children that do not
+ provide accessible interfaces of their own.
+
+ Next, the accessible interface needs to return the
+ \l{QAccessible::State}{states} that the slider can be in. We look
+ at parts of the \c state() implementation to show how just a few
+ of the states are handled:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 6
+ \dots
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 7
+
+ The superclass implementation of
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{state()}, uses the
+ QAccessibleInterface::state() implementation. We simply need to
+ disable the buttons if the slider is at its minimum or maximum.
+
+ We have now exposed the information we have about the slider to
+ the clients. For the clients to be able to alter the slider - for
+ example, to change its value - we must provide information about
+ the actions that can be performed and perform them upon request.
+ We discuss this in the next section.
+
+ \section2 Handling Action Requests from Clients
+
+ QAccessible provides a number of \l{QAccessible::}{Action}s
+ that can be performed on request from clients. If an
+ accessible object supports actions, it should reimplement the
+ following functions from QAccessibleInterface:
+
+ \list
+ \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{actionText()} returns
+ strings that describe each action. The descriptions
+ to be made available are one for each
+ \l{QAccessible::}{Text} enum value.
+ \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{doAction()} executes requests
+ from clients to perform actions.
+ \endlist
+
+ Note that a client can request any action from an object. If
+ the object does not support the action, it returns false from
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{doAction()}.
+
+ None of the standard actions take any parameters. It is possible
+ to provide user-defined actions that can take parameters.
+ The interface must then also reimplement
+ \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{userActionCount()}. Since this is not
+ defined in the MSAA specification, it is probably only useful to
+ use this if you know which specific AT-Clients will use the
+ application.
+
+ QAccessibleInterface gives another technique for clients to handle
+ accessible objects. It works basically the same way, but uses the
+ concept of methods in place of actions. The available methods are
+ defined by the QAccessible::Method enum. The following functions
+ need to be reimplemented from QAccessibleInterface if the
+ accessible object is to support methods:
+
+ \list
+ \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{supportedMethods()} returns
+ a QSet of \l{QAccessible::}{Method} values that are
+ supported by the object.
+ \o \l{QAccessibleInterface::}{invokeMethod()} executes
+ methods requested by clients.
+ \endlist
+
+ The action mechanism will probably be substituted by providing
+ methods in place of the standard actions.
+
+ To see examples on how to implement actions and methods, you
+ could examine the QAccessibleObject and QAccessibleWidget
+ implementations. You might also want to take a look at the
+ MSAA documentation.
+
+ \section2 Implementing Accessible Plugins
+
+ In this section we will explain the procedure of implementing
+ accessible plugins for your interfaces. A plugin is a class stored
+ in a shared library that can be loaded at run-time. It is
+ convenient to distribute interfaces as plugins since they will only
+ be loaded when required.
+
+ Creating an accessible plugin is achieved by inheriting
+ QAccessiblePlugin, reimplementing \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{keys()}
+ and \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{create()} from that class, and adding
+ one or two macros. The \c .pro file must be altered to use the
+ plugin template, and the library containing the plugin must be
+ placed on a path where Qt searches for accessible plugins.
+
+ We will go through the implementation of \c SliderPlugin, which is an
+ accessible plugin that produces interfaces for the
+ QAccessibleSlider we implemented in the \l{QAccessibleWidget Example}.
+ We start with the \c key() function:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 0
+
+ We simply need to return the class name of the single interface
+ our plugin can create an accessible interface for. A plugin
+ can support any number of classes; just add more class names
+ to the string list. We move on to the \c create() function:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 1
+
+ We check whether the interface requested is for the QSlider; if it
+ is, we create and return an interface for it. Note that \c object
+ will always be an instance of \c classname. You must return 0 if
+ you do not support the class.
+ \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()} checks with the
+ available accessibility plugins until it finds one that does not
+ return 0.
+
+ Finally, you need to include macros in the cpp file:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilitypluginsnippet.cpp 2
+
+ The Q_EXPORT_PLUGIN2 macro exports the plugin in the \c
+ SliderPlugin class into the \c acc_sliderplugin library. The first
+ argument is the name of the plugin library file, excluding the
+ file suffix, and the second is the class name. For more information
+ on plugins, consult the plugins \l{How to Create Qt
+ Plugins}{overview document}.
+
+ You can omit the first macro unless you want the plugin
+ to be statically linked with the application.
+
+ \section2 Implementing Interface Factories
+
+ If you do not want to provide plugins for your accessibility
+ interfaces, you can use an interface factory
+ (QAccessible::InterfaceFactory), which is the recommended way to
+ provide accessible interfaces in a statically-linked application.
+
+ A factory is a function pointer for a function that takes the same
+ parameters as \l{QAccessiblePlugin}'s
+ \l{QAccessiblePlugin::}{create()} - a QString and a QObject. It
+ also works the same way. You install the factory with the
+ \l{QAccessible::}{installFactory()} function. We give an example
+ of how to create a factory for the \c SliderPlugin class:
+
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityfactorysnippet.cpp 0
+ \dots
+ \snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityfactorysnippet.cpp 1
+
+ \omit
+
+ \section1 Implementing Bridges for Other Assistive Technologies
+
+ An accessibility bridge provides the means for an assistive
+ technology to talk to Qt. On Windows and Mac, the built-in bridges
+ will be used. On UNIX, however, there are no built-in standard
+ assistive technology, and it might therefore be necessary to
+ implement an accessible bridge.
+
+ A bridge is implemented by inheriting QAccessibleBridge for the
+ technology to support. The class defines the interface that Qt
+ needs an assistive technology to support:
+
+ \list
+ \o A root object. This is the root in the accessible
+ object tree and is of type QAccessibleInterface.
+ \o Receive events from from accessible objects.
+ \endlist
+
+ The root object is set with the
+ \l{QAccessibleBridge::}{setRootObject()}. In the case of Qt, this
+ will always be an interface for the QApplication instance of the
+ application.
+
+ Event notification is sent through
+ \l{QAccessibleBridge::}{notifyAccessibilityUpdate()}. This
+ function is called by \l{QAccessible::}{updateAccessibility()}. Even
+ though the bridge needs only to implement these two functions, it
+ must be able to communicate the entire QAccessibleInterface to the
+ underlying technology. How this is achieved is, naturally, up to
+ the individual bridge and none of Qt's concern.
+
+ As with accessible interfaces, you distribute accessible bridges
+ in plugins. Accessible bridge plugins are subclasses of the
+ QAccessibleBridgePlugin class; the class defines the functions
+ \l{QAccessibleBridgePlugin::}{create()} and
+ \l{QAccessibleBridgePlugin::}{keys()}, which must me
+ reimplemented. If Qt finds a built-in bridge to use, it will
+ ignore any available plugins.
+
+ \endomit
+
+ \section1 Further Reading
+
+ The \l{Cross-Platform Accessibility Support in Qt 4} document contains a more
+ general overview of Qt's accessibility features and discusses how it is
+ used on each platform.
+ issues
+*/