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title | date |
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An “adapt” HTML prefix | 2022-11-05T10:45:56-07:00 |
The Accessible Platform Architectures (APA) working group hopes to designate adapt-
as a reserved prefix in HTML 5. You can read the draft proposal on the public-adapt mailing list.
The "Adapt" family of specifications will allow pages to expose generic meanings behind elements, and allow users to "switch" these to versions they understand. A sarcastic sentence could have a literal alternative; words can be swapped with symbols. Like RDFa and Microdata, this will also allow authors to describe meanings behind page elements; unlike prior art, these meanings will be intended for humans and [have close synergy with the surrounding markup]({{<relref "/notes/rdf-versus-semantic-html.md">}}).
Personalization semantics make pages easier for users to understand, especially neurodivergent users. I like to think of it as primarily---but not exclusively---adding semantic meaning to the page rather than extract data from it.
Enshrining this prefix in HTML could be a huge boon for cognitive accessibility and customization on the Web by hopefully guaranteeing much greater adoption.