Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

Section 5.4: Text Boxes, Shapes, and Other Floating Objects

To learn more about text boxes, shapes, and other floating objects. Refer to our section in Microsoft Word. Creating the content and the rules for use are the same in both software. PowerPoint differs from Word in one very significant way: floating objects are easy to navigate and make up the very nature of the entire slide. The title field in a slide, for instance, is a text box. Users just needs to hit the tab button to navigate slide and each object will be selected, announced, and the alt text (if present) will be read.

You do not need to add alt text to text boxes, since the contents are directly read by a screen reader, but you MUST add alt text to other non-text objects, including shapes and icons (and of course, images, graphs, charts, etc.).

Section 5.5: Using a Series of Shapes

A series of the same shapes or images should be grouped. They should also be given alternative text and a long description. You can group them together by right clicking each of the shapes and pressing Control G.

...

Warning

These shapes are inaccessible due to them not being grouped. The Alt Text would also only apply to one star, and is not a good Alt Text example.

...

.

...