Accessibility: How Does Kerning in an InDesign File Affect Span Tags When Exported to a PDF File
I'm a beginner working with an InDesign document created by a professional graphic designer. To make the headline and subhead look visually pleasing and easy to read, he created individualized kerning between most every letter. The paragraph style name has a plus sign, which I believe indicates the style deviates from the style setting (I believe due to this individualized kerning, because when I select "Optical" for all the text, the plus sign disappears). If I change the text so all letters follow the paragraph setting, I'll lose this indivdualized kerning. I would prefer not to lose this. When I export the InDesign file to a PDF, I'm wondering if this individualized kerning is the reason for numerous span tags. My questions are: (1) Could this indivualized kerning be causing the "plus sign" in the paragraph name? (2) Knowing the PDF file needs to meet accessibility guidelines, are these span tags okay? (3) Should I delete the span tags in the tag tree? If I do, will it change the kerning in the PDF file somehow? Sometimes when I delete span tags, this has caused odd things to happen in the tag tree. (4) Is my only option to mess up the professionally designed document and have the same kerning for each letter in the headline? (I'm hoping not to have to do this.) I beleive I'm using Adobe Creative Cloud, Adobe InDesign 2024. Thank you!