Provide a title using the title element [H25]
Test infoPossible Results
Test info
Test for Success Criterion 2.4.2
About
Checked Elements: HTML
This test checks the head element of the web page and find the title element.
Short Description
It is important to provide a descriptive title for your web page.
Titles should identify the content of the web page without requiring users to read or interpret the page. They are used in a variety of places like search results, bookmarks, title bar and tabs of user agent, or the browser history to identify the page.
How to Repair
Provide a descriptive title using the title element in the head of the page.
The title should always enable the user to distinguish different pages and identify their content.
- Keep your titles simple, short and precise and
- put the most specific information at the front (as the title might be cut off).
- Don't use same titles for more than one page and and avoid unclear titles.
WCAG 2.0
- Principle 2: Operable
- User interface components and navigation must be operable. WCAG 2.0: Principle 2
- Guideline 2.4: Navigable
- Provide ways to help users navigate, find content, and determine where they are. Understanding Guideline 2.4
- Success Criterion 2.4.2: Page Titled (Level A)
- Web pages have titles that describe topic or purpose. Understanding: Success Criterion 2.4.2
- Techniques
Possible Results
- The link text of the area is ambiguous
-
he alternative text of the area in the image map is a duplicate of another alternative text in the same image map.
- The title of the page is empty
-
The title element is empty.
- The title of the page is missing
-
There is no title element in the head element.