Exceptions to Accessibility Standards
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Sometimes, you cannot
use the keyboard to sequentially navigate through the interface and
move the focus in a meaningful order.
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No workaround is available.
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The SAS High Contrast
theme has a few unresolved focus and contrast issues.
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For contrast issues,
select a different theme, and then press Ctrl+~ to invert the colors.
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The SAS Light theme
and SAS Dark theme might not provide sufficient color contrast for
some users.
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Use the SAS Corporate
theme or the SAS High Contrast theme.
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JAWS cannot read some
of the controls in the application, such as images, icons, and buttons.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS cannot read the
tooltips of items in trees, lists, and menus.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS refers to table
controls as list boxes.
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When JAWS reports that
a control is a list box, keep in mind that it might actually be a
table.
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JAWS sometimes reads
controls that are not available to users.
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No workaround is available.
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The keyboard shortcuts
that are used to interact with editable tables can conflict with keyboard
shortcuts for the Forms mode in JAWS.
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As a best practice,
disable the JAWS Virtual PC cursor when you work with tables. Tab
to the table, and press Insert+Z to disable the Virtual PC cursor.
When you finish interacting with the table, press Insert+Z to re-enable
the Virtual PC cursor.
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JAWS cannot read two-column
property tables.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS does not correctly
read the information in a table:
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JAWS cannot read the column headings
of a table.
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When table cells are not editable
and the focus is on the body of the table, JAWS reads an entire row
at a time instead of cell by cell.
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When table cells are editable and
the focus is on the body of the table, JAWS reads only the first row
of the table. If you use the arrow keys to select a cell or row, then
JAWS does not read anything. If you press Enter to edit a cell, then
JAWS reads the row that contains the edited cell.
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No workaround is available.
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When a table cell is
selected and you press Home, End, Page Up, or Page Down, the focus
moves to the first displayed column, regardless of which column you
were in.
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Use the arrow keys to
navigate through the cells of the table.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to scroll to the left and the right in some tables.
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No workaround is available.
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You cannot use Shift+F10
to open a pop-up menu.
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Use Shift+F9 to open
pop-up menus that are created for the SAS application. The generic
menu that is provided by the Flash player cannot be opened by Shift+F9.
Note: If you press Shift+F10 in
Internet Explorer and no pop-up menu is available, the browser moves
the focus to the File menu for the browser
tab. To return focus to the application area of the browser window,
press Esc.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to access the close (x) button that is in the top right corner of
a tab.
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Make sure that the focus
is on the tab, and then press Delete to close the tab.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to access the close (x) button that is in the top right corner of
a tile in the tile pane.
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Make sure that the focus
is on the tile, and then press Delete to close the tile. (The object
that is displayed in the tile is not deleted.)
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Visual focus for the
menu bar is indicated with an outline around the entire menu bar instead
of around individual menus.
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To select individual
menus, use the left or right arrow key.
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Sometimes, you cannot
use the Tab key to move the focus to the application area of a web
browser (that is, the part of the browser window that is controlled
by the Flash player).
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The following workaround
is applicable to Internet Explorer only.
Press Ctrl+ number,
where number is the ordinal
position of the application’s tab in the set of tabs that are
open in your browser window. Then press Tab to move the focus to the
application area.
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You cannot use the Tab
key to move the focus outside of a code or expression editor. Pressing
Tab within the editor only inserts tabs.
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For Internet Explorer,
press Shift+F10, and then press Esc to move the focus outside of the
editor.
For Firefox, press Alt+Tab
to switch to another application. When you switch back, the focus
will be outside of the editor.
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If you tab to an item
that is partially or entirely off-screen, the item is not automatically
scrolled back into view.
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Sometimes, you can use
the arrow keys or the Tab key to scroll the item back into view.
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When you use the Ctrl+plus
sign keyboard shortcut to zoom in, some portions of the interface
can become hidden from view.
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Use the keyboard to
access the hidden parts of the interface.
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The Ctrl+plus sign and
Ctrl+minus sign keyboard shortcuts for zooming in and out do not work
on some menus unless the menus are first opened.
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Open the menu before
you use the keyboard shortcut.
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The Ctrl+plus sign and
Ctrl+minus sign keyboard shortcuts for zooming in and out do not work
on all elements in the application window (for example, tooltips and
button labels).
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No workaround is available.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to navigate in the Layout section because
it is a Read-Only interface that is used for the visual verification
of the elements that have been created.
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Use the test button
that is in the Layout section to preview
your elements in a secondary window. The items that are displayed
in the secondary window are identical to the items that are displayed
in the Layout section, but unlike the items
in the Read-Only Layout section, you can
interact with the items in the secondary window.
Note: After the application opens
the secondary window, press Tab to move the focus to the window.
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JAWS does not explain
how to operate a drop-down list and drop-down menu.
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JAWS refers to these
controls as either "button", "button menu", or
"combo box". In addition to using Ctrl+down arrow to open
these drop-down lists and menus, you can also activate buttons and
some button menus by pressing spacebar. Pressing spacebar either opens
the control or selects the default item.
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When you use the down
arrow to scroll through the items in a "combo box," any
item that opens a secondary window will do so when you scroll down
to it. This prevents you from navigating to items that are farther
down in the drop-down list.
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Press Ctrl+down arrow
to scroll through the items in the drop-down list, and then press
Enter or Tab to make a selection.
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JAWS cannot read the
contents of a tree table (that is, a table that contains a tree) unless
the table is in Edit mode.
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Make sure that the focus
is in the tree table, and press F2 to enter Edit mode.
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JAWS cannot read the
usage diagram for a rule set.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS cannot read the
content selection tree in certain windows such as the Choose
a Location window.
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No workaround is available.
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If the list of additional
search options contains a secondary level of options, you cannot use
the keyboard to select the check boxes that are associated with that
secondary level of options.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS incorrectly states
that you should use Ctrl+Tab to switch tabs.
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To switch from one tab
to the next, press the left or right arrow key and then press Enter
or spacebar.
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You cannot determine
which cell in a table row has the focus unless the cell is in Edit
mode.
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No workaround is available.
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When a date field with
a calendar button is displayed in a table cell or selection list,
sometimes you cannot move the cursor into the field or move the focus
to the calendar button.
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No workaround is available.
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In the date field, you
cannot use the keyboard to change the plus operator to a minus operator.
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No workaround is available.
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JAWS reads the minus
operator in the date field as a “dash”.
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No workaround is available.
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When JAWS is running,
some drop-down menus do not work correctly with the keyboard.
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Changing the JAWS cursor
mode (press Insert+Z) can sometimes help.
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Color is the only means
by which missing values are denoted in a decision tree diagram. Also,
the default background color of the tree nodes and the default fill
color that represents missing values in the nodes are very similar
and can be difficult to distinguish between. A horizontal white line
indicates where the fill color stops. However, sometimes the line
can be obscured by the node label.
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No workaround is available.
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In some charts, graphs,
and diagrams, color is the only means for conveying certain types
of information.
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You can use SAS Theme
Designer for Flex to create custom colors that are easier for low-vision
and color-blind users to discern.
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In the Manage
Columns window that is opened from the toolbar in the
category view, JAWS does not announce the labels of the Available
columns and Displayed columns list
boxes.
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No workaround is available.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to move the focus to the buttons that are used for changing the month
and year in the calendar control.
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Move the focus to the
calendar control.
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To change the month, press Page
Up to go to the previous month, and press Page Down to go to the next
month.
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To change the year, press the minus
sign key to go to the previous year, and press the plus sign key to
go to the next year.
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Using the Alt Gr key
in certain key combinations sometimes causes an action instead of
displaying a character. For example, if you use the Alt Gr key with
the plus sign (+) key, the grave (`) key, or the question mark (?)
key on some keyboards, you zoom in, invert colors, and open Help (respectively)
instead of displaying the expected character.
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Use the Character Map
feature in Microsoft Windows to copy the character that you need.
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You cannot use the keyboard
to move the focus to the drop-down menu for the IF, OR, and ELSE operators
for a rule.
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No workaround is available.
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You can use the keyboard
to expand the Details section of the Versions pages
for rule sets and rule flows.
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No workaround is available.
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