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Microsoft Active Accessibility

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Microsoft Active Accessibility

Version 2.0

Purpose

Microsoft® Active Accessibility® 2.0 is a COM-based technology that improves the way accessibility aids work with applications running on Microsoft Windows®. It provides dynamic-link libraries that are incorporated into the operating system as well as a COM interface and application programming elements that provide reliable methods for exposing information about user interface elements.

For a copy of the Active Accessibility SDK documentation formatted in Microsoft Word or WinHelp, see the Accessibility home page on MSDN.

Where Applicable

By using Active Accessibility and following accessible design practices, developers can make applications running on Windows more accessible to many people with vision, hearing, or motion disabilities.

Developer Audience

Active Accessibility is designed primarily for C, C++, and Microsoft Visual Basic® developers. In general, developers need a moderate level of understanding about COM objects and interfaces as well as about Unicode.

Run-Time Requirements

Full support for Active Accessibility 2.0 is built into the Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 operating systems. Active Accessibility 2.0 also supports Microsoft Windows NT® 4.0 with Service Pack 6 and Windows 98.

See Also

Microsoft Accessibility Web site

Accessibility home page on MSDN

Overview

General information about Microsoft Active Accessibility technology.

Reference

Documentation of Active Accessibility C/C++ reference.