commit | fce5a3186698e6b22248cfa2f0521ae1a15d677a | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | yingleiw <yingleiw@google.com> | Fri Jan 15 12:09:02 2021 -0800 |
committer | yingleiw <yingleiw@google.com> | Wed Jan 20 11:42:18 2021 -0800 |
tree | 91cc7e3be45ea5dd576fbd3f41c1a403fa8a4556 | |
parent | 940831a8a47b30b58c246abc0990adc23ee6a91a [diff] |
prune accessibility tree to remove nodes covered by sibilings If a node is completely covered by its sibilings (we don't prune parents because a touch filter in children can still pass touches to parents, like the parent can be scrollable), this node is removed. The detailed reasoning can be found in aosp/1532973 (dependent cl). I'm not sure whether it is a bit risky. For all-text nodes, if we have a transparent sibiling on top of it handling touches (thus the sibiling will show up as a semantics node), the covered text (still visible) will not be accessibile. For example, a book annotation app which has a transparent layer on top of text and click on a location will create a note on this transparent layer. But such an app is not accessibility in nature (at least to talkback users and switch access users) and we need to ask developers not to report this transparent layer. But I'm not sure whether there are other common usage cases where prune the tree this way will result in loss of information. If we find problems later, we can revert this cl. Note that pane api implementation in AndroidComposeViewAccessibilityDelegate.kt depends on this cl, so if this cl is reverted, the pane api implementation needs to revised. Here is a reference cl(does not depend on tree prune) if this needs to be done: aosp/1482398. Test: tested with drawer, bottom sheet, and backdrop (with proper semantics to report expand/collapse), and the covered items can't be accessed (both linear navigation and touch explore) in talkback. Unit test added in AndroidAcessibilityTest.kt. Change-Id: I7a48d5410470365c29e3bd3e7ba6dff033607b05
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