The WCAG working group has provided PDF Techniques for WCAG 2.0. Note: If you are creating forms, web pages, applications, or other dynamic and/or interactive content, these you should also consult the W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG 2.0). without hyperlinks to other documents, unlike web content), and and do not include audio, video, or embedded interactivity), where dynamic features are limited to automatic page numbering, table of contents, etc.
not simply images, although they may contain images), These techniques can help you to use Acrobat 9 Pro to create documents that are:
We recommend considering HTML instead of or in addition to PDF where appropriate. screen readers) is not as widespread as for HTML documents. Note: While PDF accessibility has improved over the years, accessibility support for PDF by authoring tools, viewers and assistive technologies (e.g. Acrobat 9 Pro includes an accessibility checking feature. At the time of testing (January 19, 2011), Acrobat 9 Pro (Windows) enables the production of accessible digital office documents.