I'm attempting to write good fallback text content for a webcomic. Naturally, there is a huge amount of actual text locked in the image, and plenty of descriptions/actions/expressions that could also be described. Having longdesc="#transcript"
seems like the perfect use case, and comes with benefits for searching and automatic translation.
But what do I do with the alt
? I've checked the official specs, and dug around in WebAIM and similar sites, but I've never seen a use case for having longdesc
supplant alt
. This makes sense for the usual applications (overview a chart in the alt text, link to a full breakdown elsewhere), but it seems like any alternative text I could offer for a comic would be redundant and miss out on the rich markup provided by the long description.
Here are some possibilities:
<img alt="" longdesc="#transcript" />
<img alt="[transcript text stripped of HTML and made attribute-safe]" longdesc="#transcript" />
<img alt="[Summary of comic contents... Which can get iffy, like this: 'Garfield talks about being fat. Punchline: he's fat.']" longdesc="#transcript" />
<img alt="[apologize profusely to screen reader users]" longdesc="#transcript" />
None of these seem ideal for various reasons, whether that be repeated content, no longdesc
support, or me annoying Assistive Technology users. Without a sound declaration from folks who have thought about and dealt with this stuff way more than I have, I'm at a loss.