Part I. Overview

Alejandro Piñeiro Iglesias



          

        

Cally (Clutter Accessibility Implementation Library) is the Clutter implementation of the ATK interfaces. You can see as the Clutter equivalent of GAIL, which provides accessibility support for GTK+ and other GNOME related libraries.

This implementation expose Clutter actors to accessibility tools like Orca. This allows not only writing accessible user interfaces, but also allows testing and verification frameworks based on accessibility technologies to inspect and test a Clutter scene graph.

This reference manual defines the different APIs defined in Cally. Anyway take into account that the most common use of case Cally is transparent to the user, as the different accessibility tools are intended to use the abstract ATK interfaces, and *not directly* Cally, so this tools can communicate with applications using different toolkits, like GTK+, Java, Clutter, etc.

The purpose of this reference is allow to extend Cally functionality in any Clutter-based widget toolkit. Clutter is more low-level that other toolkits like GTK+, and some toolkits have started to appear based on Clutter: MX, Shell Toolkit, Candies, Glitter, etc. This means that it is really likely that these libraries will require extra accessibility support.

GAIL used a different approach, being a almost-pure-opaque implementation of the ATK interfaces. So you can't extend it directly. You need to use GObject and ATK mechanisms, like run-time anonymous inheritance, to extend it. Although valid to some custom cases, it showed to be really problematic and hacky in wider approaches, like HAIL(Hildon Accessibility Implementation Library). As explained, Clutter is more likely to be extended, so these issues would arise sooner.

Part of the accessibility support is implemented on Clutter, like the initialization code, and the method to obtain the accessibility object for each Clutter object. In the same way, to make it easier, and to allow access to Clutter object private data, it would be really likely that the accessibility support would be implemented directly on some Clutter objects

Check the next clutter methods for more information:

clutter_actor_get_accessible()

Virtual method to obtain the accessibility object of a clutter actor

clutter_get_accessibility_enabled()

Method to check if accessibility is enabled.