Wikipedia:Alternative Text For Images - Text Pictures

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures

Alternative text is text associated with an image that serves the same purpose and conveys the same essential information as the image. 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 functionality is lost. Absent or unhelpful alternative text can be a source of frustration for visually impaired users of the Web.

On Wikipedia, alternative text is typically supplied through a combination of the image caption and the text supplied for the image alt parameter in the MediaWiki markup. The following example produces the adjacent image:

[[File:Jacques-Louis David 017.jpg |thumb |upright=0.75 |alt=Painting of Napoleon Bonaparte in His Study at the Tuileries |''[[The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries]]'' by [[Jacques-Louis David]]]]

The alt parameter text ("Painting of Napoleon Bonaparte in His Study at the Tuileries") is not normally visible to readers; however, it may be displayed by web browsers when images are switched off, or read out loud by screen readers for those with visual impairment, and can be used by search engines to determine the content of the image. In keeping with other Internet guidelines, the term "alt text" (in a code font) is used here to refer to the text supplied for the image alt parameter and which generates text for the HTML alt attribute; the term "alternative text" refers to the text equivalent for an image, regardless of where that text resides.

For images that link to their image description page (which is nearly all images on Wikipedia), the alt text cannot be blank nor should the alt parameter be absent. This is because a screen reader, in order to describe the purpose of the link, will default to reading out the image filename when no alt text is available. This is usually not helpful. In the above Napoleon example, the screen reader would have read out "link graphic slash Jacques hyphen Louis underscore David underscore zero one seven" had we not supplied the alt parameter.

An image that is purely decorative (provides no information and serves only an aesthetic purpose) requires no alternative text. Often the caption fully meets the requirements for alternative text. However, the only situation where blank alt text is acceptable is where such images are unlinked, which is rarely possible. One solution is to provide something at least minimally useful such as |alt=photograph , |alt=painting, or |alt=sculpture. Another solution, if the caption doesn't already describe or identify the image, is for the alt text to do so as briefly as possible.

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
Audience

The audience for alternative text includes:

  • readers with visual impairment of varying degrees who browse Wikipedia using a screen reader that translates text into speech or Braille, such as JAWS, NVDA or Orca;
  • readers using browsers that do not support images (e.g., Lynx), or that are configured not to display them (e.g. Wikipedia Zero);
  • search-engine bots.

Experiencing Wikipedia with a screen reader requires practice. An alternative is to install the Fangs add-on for Firefox, which displays the words spoken by a screen reader. An experienced screen-reader user may choose to skip portions of the text.

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
How to write alternative text

Basics

Alternative text should be short, such as "A basketball player" or "Tony Blair shakes hands with George W. Bush". If it needs to be longer, the important details should appear in the first few words, allowing the user of a screen reader to skip forward once the key points are understood. Very long descriptions can be left for the body of the article. MediaWiki does not support HTML's longdesc attribute. All readers will be aware this element is an image, so adding "photograph of" isn't usually necessary.

The alt text should consist of plain text (no HTML or wiki markup such as wikilinks) and be all on one line. The text must comply with Neutral point of view, Verifiability, No original research, and Biographies of living persons. Since it cannot contain inline citations it must not convey any contentious point, or material not obvious to any reader. The alt text is read out by screen readers just before the caption, so try to avoid having the same details in both.

Importance of context

Understanding the context of an image is vital. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 recommend editors consider four questions:

  • Why is this non-text content here?
  • What information is it presenting?
  • What purpose does it fulfil?
  • If I could not use the non-text content, what words would I use to convey the same function or information?

For example, an image of Napoleon Bonaparte could be used in

  • an article on great military leaders where it illustrates an example of such a leaderâ€"the alternative text should name the subject;
  • an article on Napoleon illustrating what he looked likeâ€"the alternative text should briefly describe his appearance if it matters to the article;
  • an article on a painting of himâ€"the alternative text should briefly describe the painting.

Images that contain words

If an image contains words important to the reader's understanding, the alternative text should contain those words. If it contains non-Latin characters, consider providing a transliteration. Screen readers without Unicode support will read a character outside Latin-1 as a question mark, and even in the latest version of JAWS, the most popular screen reader, Unicode characters are very difficult to read.

Captions and nearby text

For details of the wiki markup that produces these elements, see Wikipedia:Extended image syntax#Alt text and caption.

Images are typically thumbnails with captions. The caption is visible to all readers, and can contain HTML markup, wikilinks and inline citations. An infobox often contains a plain image with the caption as a separate row. A good caption should succinctly identify the subject of the image and establish the image's relevance to the article, without detailing the obvious.

Where the caption is sufficiently descriptive or evocative of the image, or where it makes clear what the function of the image is, one option is to write |alt=refer to caption. Where nearby text in the article performs the same function, it can be |alt=refer to adjacent text.

Maps and diagrams

With maps, diagrams and charts, the colour, position, and size of elements are not important. Instead, concentrate on the information being presented. For example a chart may have alternative text "Sales in June, July and August", and a diagrammatic animation may have alternative text "Animation of a car engine in motion". The structural formula of a chemical compound can be unambiguously described using IUPAC nomenclature and the drug or chemistry infoboxes include this information.

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
Alt text in templates and galleries

Templates
Many templates such as {{Infobox}} and {{Location map+}} have their own parameters for specifying alt text. If a template lacks such a parameter, consider asking that it be added.

Galleries
The <gallery> tag supports alt text since MediaWiki 1.18. {{Gallery}} and {{Multiple image}} also support it. For an example on using the table syntax to create a gallery see Galleries.

Timelines
The <timeline> tag generates an image with no alt text. When using tables instead, add a table summary, which is read out by screen readers to give an overview of the contents.

Math formulae
The <math> tag is used to generate math formulae. These may be rendered as an image or using text, depending on their complexity and user preferences. For simple formulae, use the alt parameter to translate it to English. More complex formulae are hard to specify and the original markup may be the best option, which is the default if no alt parameter is supplied.

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
Links and attribution

Writing "|alt=" will cause the MediaWiki software to render HTML with an empty alt attribute in the img tag. When the image is a link, screen readers will read out the link filename (e.g., "slash green underscore tick") if the HTML alt attribute is empty or missing. Nearly all images in Wikipedia articles are links to the image description page, which contains a larger size version of the image, as well as licensing and attribution information.

Wikipedia articles sometimes contain images that do not link to an image page, for example an Information icon. Such images should be configured so they are ignored by screen readers. This is achieved by adding |link=|alt= to the image wiki markup. Removing the link is acceptable for images in the public domain or the equivalent CC0. Links should not be suppressed for any image that requires attribution.

Most images in Wikipedia articles do not serve an active function; they are not buttons or menu options. Where the image serves as a link to another article, name the article in the alternative text. Where following the link performs an operation (such as sort), indicate the operation. Do not say "click here" or "link to" as the reader will already know the image is a link and may not be clicking a mouse button on it.

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
Examples

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
Notes

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
References

Wikipedia:Alternative text for images  - text pictures
External links

  • Requirements for providing text to act as an alternative for images â€" in the HTML specification
  • Altviewer â€" tool for reviewing alternative text associated with images and videos in Wikipedia articles
  • Fangs â€" screen reader emulator

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