Brandon
Brandon
Note that tagged PDFs are starting to be required at confrances such as [SIG Access](https://assets19.sigaccess.org/creating_accessible_pdfs.html) and [ICAD](https://icad2019.icad.org/call-for-participation/) Governments around the world, such as the [United States,](https://www.hhs.gov/web/section-508/making-files-accessible/checklist/pdf/index.html) [Ontario,](https://www.aoda.ca/the-four-levels-of-pdf-accessibility/) [Australia,](https://www.visionaustralia.org/services/digital-access/blog/10-12-2014/pdf-accessibility-update-from-australian-government) [European Union,](https://accessible-digital-documents.com/blog/the-eu-accessibility-directive-and-pdf/)...
Note that I've found none of the PDFs produced by Pandoc to be accessible, even from the HTML to PDF engines. Apparently [PDFLib](https://www.pdflib.com/products/pdflib-family/pdflib/) produces tagged PDFs, but that is it....
Yes, if your university receives government money, or has an internal mandate to be accessible, you're required to have accessible content. There are 2 options with Pandoc: 1. Produce HTML...
Just received this information from another Pandoc user on [accessibility-meta.sty](https://github.com/AndyClifton/AccessibleMetaClass): Revisiting producing structured PDF from LaTeX (2015) -- provides some useful tips on creating hopefully accessible PDFs with accessibility-meta.sty. There...
Good to know. So it is looking like tagpdf is the best option for now. I would be more than happy to beta test the UX of tagged PDFs from...
I opened it and here are my comments: 1. when I opened it, the first message I got was: "Cannot extract the embedded font 'OZCXQN+LMSans10-Bold'. Some characters may not display...
A quick way to see how the computer reads the order is to select all and paste the output into a text file. The more difficult tags like heading, link,...