We strive to Welcome,
Worship, Teach,
& Serve
in the name of Christ
The primary accessibility feature of this web site is that it is written to the standards of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) rather than some vendor's corruption of it. In addition to validating the syntax, I try to follow the semantics as well, although I must admit I have used some less-than-optimal markup because I couldn't convince the browsers to present it properly.
Further, I use XHTML 1.0 Basic , which strips away most of the presentational clutter retained from outdated versions of HTML, and is designed to work on cell phones, PDAs, voice readers, and other limited platforms. Even within this, I use no browser-side scripts, no motion, flashing lights, bells, or whistles. I regularly check the pages' presentation in the current Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer 6.0SP2, and the text-based lynx, and occasionally through older versions of Konqueror or a cell phone (translated by google). I took myself through Mark Pilgrim's 30-day web course in accessibility , then downloaded the W3C 's Web Content Guidelines and plowed through the check list, marking up abbreviations and acronyms, linearizing tables, and finally writing this guide to the site. If you place your cursor over an acronym or abbreviation in most visual browsers, the expansion of the term will appear as a tiny popup window, often called a tooltip. For an example, try W3C , EYC, or VOD.
As this site is a living document describing the activities of a diverse set of ministries, a linear layout was obviously out of the question. I decided to make every page have a direct link to every other page. (If you want to get from a layout page to a linear page or vice-versa, it might be two.) The general organization of the site is reflected in the nested list of the main navigation menu at the end of each page (usually displayed to the lower right). The main pages are listed first, followed by the miscellaneous rogue pages, then the following groups:
Home , Events , and Service Schedules are updated frequently (often daily) and appear in larger text on the link menu, as does About Us , which is not updated as often, but is of interest to browsers and other first-time visitors.
The Auto-Generated Site Map is a list of the pages on this web site, sorted alphabetically by title. It also contains alphabetized lists of this site's web pages, this site's style sheets and images, and duplicates of all external links, including links to bible passages. It is automatically compiled by reaping all of the various links on the other pages. It is accessible from any page on the site through the main menu, or access key 3.
Using access keys is browser-dependent, but many seem to use the Alt-# convention: Hold down the alt or other special key while pressing the number. In the case of Internet Explorer, this must be followed by the enter key to actually follow the link; in Mozilla and some others, the Alt-number is sufficient. The key codes are listed in the small menu list at the top of each page. The top list (row) of links is constant for all pages; the second list is used to skip into various points of the current document. The convention used of keys based on the the convention suggested in 30 days to a more accessible website :
Each page has a linearized version, which can be accessed by Key 3. These pages are automatically generated with the basic pages, so they are usually kept completely up-to-date with the layout versions. The following changes are made to linearize each page:
Text-only versions of these pages are not yet available. Please write me if these would be helpful to you, and let me know how you would use them. I keep getting caught between no-graphics html and straight fixed-column ASCII files. One of these days, I'll probably do both.
I try to write to the simplest version of the standards, so that the greatest number of browser applications can use it in some reasonable way. I'm also going to make the assumption that you use an application which complements your abilities; I'm not going to jump through hoops to try to make every bad app work for every possible user. I've also decided to abandon the truly ancient (pre-2000) browsers that don't understand XHTML or CSS.
Latest Change:
Sat Jul 03 2010
Christ Church Slidell is not responsible for the content at these sites.