sigmaleph: (Default)
[personal profile] sigmaleph
here's something most likely some people have thought more about than me and hopefully have better solutions: how do you represent math in a way accessible to screen readers?

a lot of the time, if you're writing math any more complicated than basic addition, substraction, and multiplication, you'll want to go beyond putting unicode characters in a line (a recent popular tumblr post about inconsistent order-of-operations standards illustrates why even just representing division can get tricky if you are confined to a single line). some websites use scripts to parse LaTeX into images, which is very convenient if you can see and entirely useless if you can't. and i'm sure trying to parse LaTeX formatting by hearing a bunch of backslashes and brackets and stuff is not pleasant.

so, if you had to provide alt text to an equation as an image, is there something better than just trying to spell it out in plain English and trying very hard to disambiguate all the things we usually rely on actually drawing the equation for instead?

MathML?

Date: 2019-08-26 05:37 pm (UTC)
ilzolende: drawing of me, framed with L10a140 link (Default)
From: [personal profile] ilzolende
According to the University of Washington, using MathML is the most accessible way to display math on the web.

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