Inactive and Semi-Suppressed Components #110
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Inactive and Semi-Suppressed Components
A brief discussion of guidelines relating to the contrast needs of inactive, disabled, semi-suppressed, or de-enhanced components.
Per WCAG 2
Under WCAG 2, there is no contrast requirement for disabled or inactive components, a sort of catch-all which keeps WCAG 2 (developed circa 2005-2007) simpler to implement, and (hopefully) focus on the most important content.
However, there are other guidelines than WCAG 2 with which to find salient guidance. And certainly for items like this which are not covered by WCAG 2, it's useful to look toward other standards and practices.
Inactive Components
Elements that are not active, not engageable, not in focus, semi-suppressed, present various considerations.
There is a definite need to present the non-active element in a manner that is clearly distinguishable from active elements.
Non active elements often need some level of readability/discernablility as well, so that a user can determine what is inactive.
In some cases, inactive elements should be accompanied by a label or tool tip that explains why it is inactive.
Practical Guidance
In the 1990s research of Whittaker/Lovie-Kitchin/Legge et alia in peer reviewed papers such as Visual Requirements for Reading, the definitions of critical size, and critical contrast were established. But also the concept of "contrast reserve", which is the amount of contrast above the JND threshold contrast (the fine point of visibility/invisibility).
A Table Referencing Establisshed Contrast Levels and Guidelines
Reserve
term
term
a Words per Minute
¹ Whittaker/Lovie-Kitchin
² APC-Readability Criterion
³ Typical APCA Contrast, not considering size
Inactive
Draft guidance at APC-RC is
A contrast reduction of$L^c\ 30$ from active to inactive component is sufficient to express that an item is inactive, but is still readable provided it does not decend lower than $L^c\ 30$ . There is some consideration that this could be increased to a reduction of as much as $L^c\ 45$ in some cases, where the spatial resolution supports it.
References
1 Visual Requirements for Reading
2 APC-RC Uee Cases for Text
3 Easy Intro to APCA
4 APC-RC Mid level conformance
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