Hi again,

I’m going to start looking into this from the examples in texdev. They are sort 
of simple and I think it should be doable. If you have something more 
sophisticated, it’d be nice once I have the basic version.

I’ll share it in Savannah as feature/presentations.

Best,/PA
Enviado desde mi iPhone

> El 23 jun 2026, a las 6:35, Pedro Andres Aranda Gutierrez <[email protected]> 
> escribió:
> 
> Hi Roger,
> 
> I haven’t used ltx-talk but would like to start exploring. Do you have any 
> sample presentation/document to share? It would be the perfect starting point 
> to evaluate whether we need a full exporter or just a clever set of settings.
> 
> Thx/PA
> Ox-latex maintainer 
> 
> Enviado desde mi iPhone
> 
>>> El 22 jun 2026, a las 23:50, jdashiel <[email protected]> escribió:
>>> 
>> 
>> Several years ago i asked if org pdf content was or could be made accessible 
>> and got a negative feply. Microsoft word puts a language tag describing the 
>> language used in the documents. If a word document is sent into a pdf file 
>> it can at least talk on screen readers though figures will also need tagging.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Sent from my Galaxy
>> 
>> 
>> -------- Original message --------
>> From: Roger Schürch <[email protected]>
>> Date: 6/22/26 15:04 (GMT-05:00)
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: [FR] Exporter for ltx-talk
>> 
>> To deliver accessible learning content, universities request that PDFs made 
>> available to students be tagged and pass their validation tools. The LaTeX 
>> package ltx-talk, together with LuaLaTeX, supposedly allows the creation of 
>> tagged PDF slides similar to the LaTeX's beamer. The latter seems ill suited 
>> to produce compliant PDFs. To produce compliant PDF slides, I would love to 
>> have an export backend for ltx-talk. Alternatively, I would love to hear how 
>> other Org-mode users produce compliant PDF slides.
>> ---
>> Roger Schürch
>> 

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