Page Title: Situs Judi Bola Online Resmi Terpercaya Indonesia - EBOLA88
July 26, 2021 22:00

Consistent labeling of landmarks

Actions

Severity Action
no actions

Details

Rule ID Navigation 4
Definition Consistent labeling of landmarks across all pages in a website.
Purpose
  • One of the fundamental features of the web is the provision of easy access to useful information. Consistent labeling of comparable landmark-identified content across all pages of a website will make it easier for people to find information they are seeking and to navigate between and within pages.
WCAG Success Criteria

3.2.4 Consistent Identification (Level AA, Primary Success Criterion)

Rule Category Site Navigation
Scope Website
Target Resources main, navigation, search, banner, complementary and contentinfo landmarks
  • h2
Techniques
  • Most pages have sections associated with the main, navigation, banner and contentinfo landmarks in your page templates for the website.
  • If the page includes a website search form, use the search landmark.
  • Landmarks only need labels (using aria-label or aria-labelledby) if there is more than one landmark of the same type on a page.
  • If landmarks have labels, use consistent labeling of the landmarks across all pages within the website.
Manual Checks
  • Verify that the main content of the page is contained within the main landmark.
  • Verify that recurring content at the top of each page is contained within a banner landmark.
  • Verify that website navigational links are contained within navigation landmarks.
  • Verify that recurring content at the bottom of each page is contained within a contentinfo landmark.
  • Verify that if a landmark has a label and there are comparable landmarks on other pages in the website, the labels are the same on each page.
Informational Links

Element Results

Element Identifier Result Element Position Message

Column Definitions

Element Identifier
Information about the element associated with the result.
The information typically includes the tag name, accessible name or other information related to the rule requirements.
"Page" means that the result applied to the page. For example, the rule "One main landmark on the page" is a page level rule.
Element Position
The element position is based on the DOM order of elements in the page.
The element position maybe useful in helping to locate a specific element on the page evaluated (e.g smaller numbers are typically toward the beginning of a page and larger numbers typically toward the end of a page).
Element position 1 is the first element.
The highest element position is the last element.
Element position values for most rule/page results will not be consecutive since a rule only applies to a sub set of elements found on a page.