Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A text-based web browser such as Lynx will display the alt text instead of the image (or will display the value attribute if the image is a clickable button). [13] A graphical browser typically will display only the image, and will display the alt text only if the user views the image's properties, or has configured the browser not to display ...
The alternative text serves the same purpose as the image. [1] On the web, alt text is supplied through the alt attribute. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) guidelines state that an image's alt attribute should convey meaning, rather than a literal description of the image itself. [2]
Alternative text (or alt text) is text associated with an image that serves the same purpose and conveys the same essential information as the image. [1] In situations where the image is not available to the reader, perhaps because they have turned off images in their web browser or are using a screen reader due to a visual impairment, the alternative text ensures that no information or ...
In the case of Main Page images, the alt text is automatically made exactly the same as the image title, so where the latter is descriptive enough, there's no need for additional alt text. If the alt text provided is different from the caption, the screen reader will typically read the alt text and not the caption.
An image description is a form of text-based description referring to the characteristics of an image. Alt text presents visual information via text (usually encoded in HTML code), primarily to aid blind people using screen readers so they may have access and interact with the visual.
Otherwise, (if the image type is unspecified or is "frameless"), this text is used for the link title provided the link has not been suppressed with "|link=", and also for the alt text provided an explicit alt=Alt has not been supplied. The actual alt text for the displayed image will be one of the following, in order of preference:
In other words, the "it is a link to further information" (i.e. a link to the file information page) is something all images have in common, but the alt-text for an image is part of the page (not the image) and helps to integrate the image into the page it is being used on (i.e. this image is being used here for this reason, and [where it helps ...
Here a typical screen reader will read the image's alt text, skip the image's title text, and will then read the image's caption, resulting in something like "A cartoon centipede reads books and types on a laptop. link The Wikipede edits Entomology link." Skipping the title text is OK since it's a duplicate of the caption.