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/****************************************************************************
**
** Copyright (C) 2011 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
** All rights reserved.
** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
**
** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
**
** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:FDL$
** 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 Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying
** this package.
**
** GNU Free Documentation License
** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Free
** Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software
** Foundation and appearing in the file included in the packaging of this
** file.
**
** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com.
** $QT_END_LICENSE$
**
****************************************************************************/
/*!
\group accessibility
\title Accessibility Classes
*/
/*!
\page accessible.html
\title Accessibility
\brief How to make your applications accessible to those with disabilities.
\ingroup technology-apis
\ingroup qt-basic-concepts
\ingroup best-practices
\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, Mac
OS X Accessibility on Mac OS X, and AT-SPI on Unix/X11. 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.cpp 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 is implemented for one of
Qt's standard widgets: QSlider. The accessible interface,
QAccessibleSlider, inherits from QAccessibleAbstractSlider, which
in turn inherits QAccessibleWidget. You do not need to examine the
QAccessibleAbstractSlider class to read this section. If you want
to take a look, the code for all of Qt's accessible interfaces are
found in src/plugins/accessible/widgets. Here is the
QAccessibleSlider's constructor:
\snippet doc/src/snippets/accessibilityslidersnippet.cpp 0
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:
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 the QAccessibleSlider interface
from 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 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, you can 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 QAccessibleSlider interface:
\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
*/
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