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Proposed Important word spacing in style attributes is wide enough

Description

This rule checks that the style attribute is not used to prevent adjusting word-spacing by using !important, except if it’s at least 0.16 times the font size.

Applicability

This rule applies to any HTML element with one or more visible text node children, when all the following are true for the word-spacing property of the element:

Expectation

For each test target, the computed value of its word-spacing property is at least 0.16 times the computed value of its font-size property.

Assumptions

Accessibility Support

While some assistive technologies are able to set user origin or user agent origin styles, others, such as browser extensions, are only able to set styles with the author origin. Such assistive technologies cannot create styles “winning” the cascade sort over a style attribute with an important declaration.

Background

Styles declared in a style attribute have higher cascade specificity than any selector; therefore, they “win” the cascade sort over any other style from author origin, i.e. it cannot be overridden by any of these. On the other hand, if such a style is declared in a style sheet, it can still “lose” the cascade sort to declarations with higher specificity or simply coming from a later style sheet (such as ones injected by assistive technologies). This rule ensures that the element is not in the first case and that the style can be overridden by users, unless it is already at least the minimum required threshold. Important styles that are declared with the user or user agent can win the cascade sort over styles with the author origin.

CSS specifications define each declaration as being either important (if it has the !important annotation) or normal. Given that normal is also a keyword for some properties, and that !important is wider known than this distinction, this rule rather uses “important”/”not important” to avoid confusion.

Bibliography

About test cases

Test cases descriptions abusively refer to the CSS properties of text nodes, meaning the one of their parent.

Accessibility Requirements Mapping

Input Aspects

The following aspects are required in using this rule.

Test Cases

Passed

Passed Example 1

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 0.2 times the font size.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.2em !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Passed Example 2

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 4px, which is exactly 0.16 times the computed font-size.

<style>
	p {
		font-size: 25px;
	}
</style>

<p style="word-spacing: 4px !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Passed Example 3

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This p element has two declared values for its word-spacing property. The latest wins the cascade sort. It has a value of 0.2em, which is wide enough.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.1em !important; word-spacing: 0.2em !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Passed Example 4

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This p element has two declared values for its word-spacing property. The one which is important wins the cascade sort. It has a value of 0.2em, which is wide enough.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.2em !important; word-spacing: 0.1em">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Passed Example 5

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 2px, 0.2 times its computed font-size of 10px; the div element has no visible text node children.

<div style="font-size: 16px; word-spacing: 2px !important">
	<p style="font-size: 10px;">
		The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
	</p>
</div>

Passed Example 6

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 0.2 times its font-size; the div element has no visible text node children.

<div style="word-spacing: 0.1em !important">
	<p style="word-spacing: 0.2em !important;">
		The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
	</p>
</div>

Failed

Failed Example 1

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of only 0.1 times the font-size, which is below the required minimum.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.1em !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Failed Example 2

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 2px which is only 0.1 times the font-size (20px), thus below the required minimum.

<style>
	p {
		font-size: 20px;
	}
</style>

<p style="word-spacing: 2px !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Failed Example 3

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 0.

<p style="word-spacing: normal !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Failed Example 4

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This p element has a computed word-spacing of 0.

<p style="word-spacing: initial !important">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable

Inapplicable Example 1

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There is no HTML element.

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
    <text y="20" style="word-spacing: 0.1em">ACT rules</text>
</svg>

Inapplicable Example 2

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There is no text node.

<div style="word-spacing: 0.1em !important;"></div>

Inapplicable Example 3

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There is no visible text node because of display: none.

<p style="display: none; word-spacing: 0.1em !important;">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable Example 4

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There is no visible text node because it is positioned off-screen.

<p style="position: absolute; top: -999em; word-spacing: 0.1em !important;">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable Example 5

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This p element’s word-spacing property is not declared in a style attribute.

<p style="width: 60%">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable Example 6

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The specified value of the word-spacing property of this p element is declared in the style sheet, not in the style attribute (it wins the cascade sort because it is important).

<style>
	p {
		word-spacing: 0.1em !important;
	}
</style>

<p style="word-spacing: 0.2em">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable Example 7

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This p element does not have an important computed word-spacing.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.1em">
	The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
</p>

Inapplicable Example 8

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The computed value of the word-spacing property of this span element is the inherited value, that is the computed value of the p element and therefore not important; the p element has no visible text node children.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.1em">
	<span style="word-spacing: inherit !important;">
		The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
	</span>
</p>

Inapplicable Example 9

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The computed value of the word-spacing property of this span element is the inherited value, that is the computed value of the p element and therefore not important; the p element has no visible text node children.

<p style="word-spacing: 0.1em">
	<span style="word-spacing: unset !important;">
		The toy brought back fond memories of being lost in the rain forest.
	</span>
</p>

Glossary

Namespaced Element

An element with a specific namespaceURI value from HTML namespaces. For example an “SVG element” is any element with the “SVG namespace”, which is http://www.w3.org/2000/svg.

Namespaced elements are not limited to elements described in a specification. They also include custom elements. Elements such as a and title have a different namespace depending on where they are used. For example a title in an HTML page usually has the HTML namespace. When used in an svg element, a title element has the SVG namespace instead.

Outcome

An outcome is a conclusion that comes from evaluating an ACT Rule on a test subject or one of its constituent test target. An outcome can be one of the three following types:

Note: A rule has one passed or failed outcome for every test target. When there are no test targets the rule has one inapplicable outcome. This means that each test subject will have one or more outcomes.

Note: Implementations using the EARL10-Schema can express the outcome with the outcome property. In addition to passed, failed and inapplicable, EARL 1.0 also defined an incomplete outcome. While this cannot be the outcome of an ACT Rule when applied in its entirety, it often happens that rules are only partially evaluated. For example, when applicability was automated, but the expectations have to be evaluated manually. Such “interim” results can be expressed with the incomplete outcome.

Visible

Content perceivable through sight.

Content is considered visible if making it fully transparent would result in a difference in the pixels rendered for any part of the document that is currently within the viewport or can be brought into the viewport via scrolling.

Content is defined in WCAG.

For more details, see examples of visible.

Rule Versions

  1. Latest version, 23 June 2022 (compare)
    • Simplify accessibility support paragraph
  2. Previous version, 28 January 2022

Implementations

This section is not part of the official rule. It is populated dynamically and not accounted for in the change history or the last modified date.

Implementation Type Consistency Report
Alfa (fully automated) 0.57.2 Automated tool Partial Alfa (fully automated) Report
Alfa (semi-automated) 0.57.2 Semi-automated tool Partial Alfa (semi-automated) Report
Equal Access Accessibility Checker 3.1.42-rc.0 Automated tool Partial Equal Access Accessibility Checker Report
SortSite 6.45 Automated tool Partial SortSite Report
Total Validator 17.1.0 Linter Consistent Total Validator Report
Total Validator (+Browser) 17.3.0 Automated tool Consistent Total Validator (+Browser) Report
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