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Term entries in the full glossary matching "view"
W3C Glossaries
Showing results 1 - 4 of 4
- editing view
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From Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2000-02-03) | Glossary for this source
An "editing view" is a view provided by the authoring tool that allows editing.
- page view
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From Web Characterization Terminology & Definitions Sheet (1999-05-24) | Glossary for this source
Visual rendering of a Web page in a specific client environment at
a specific point in time.
- view
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From Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2000-02-03) | Glossary for this source
Authoring tools may render the same content in a variety of ways; each rendering is called a "view." Some authoring tools will have several different types of view, and some allow views of several documents at once. For instance, one view may show raw markup, a second may show a structured tree, a third may show markup with rendered objects while a final view shows an example of how the document may appear if it were to be rendered by a particular browser. A typical way to distinguish views in a graphic environment is to place each in a separate window.
- view, viewport
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From User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2002-12-17) | Glossary for this source
The user agent renders content through one or more viewports. Viewports include windows, frames, pieces of paper, loudspeakers, and virtual magnifying glasses. A viewport may contain another viewport (e.g., nested frames). User agent user interface controls such as prompts, menus, and alerts are not viewports. Graphical and tactile viewports have two spatial dimensions. A viewport may also have temporal dimensions, for instance when audio, speech, animations, and movies are rendered. When the dimensions (spatial or temporal) of rendered content exceed the dimensions of the viewport, the user agent provides mechanisms such as scroll bars and advance and rewind controls so that the user can access the rendered content "outside" the viewport. Examples include: when the user can only view a portion of a large document through a small graphical viewport, or when audio content has already been played.When several viewports coexist, only one has the current focus at a given moment. This viewport is highlighted to make it stand out.User agents may render the same content in a variety of ways; each rendering is called a view. For instance, a user agent may allow users to view an entire document or just a list of the document's headers. These are two different views of the document.
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