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2.4 Set of Documents: Why are "sets of documents" that are organized by means other than referring to each other or linking not included? I can think of many cases that I don't know how to address based on the definition provided. Some examples that pop immediately to mind... - A single PDF in which many individual documents have been collated. The sub-documents (if we want to call them that) aren't referenced or linked, but (contra Note 1) they do have semantic significance as a "set" nonetheless because they exist as specific, identifiable, individually targetable (i.e., navigable) pages in a given file. Navigation could occur via bookmarks, scripts, actions, "pages" view (thumbnails)… things not mentioned in WCAG2ICT. - A PDF with 5 attachments. The attachments are not referenced in the text, nor is a link provided. Is this a "set"? If not, why not? Most UIs would present it as such. - Multiple PDF files in which bookmarks or actions (not textual references or link annotations) are used to connect one PDF to another (in UI terms). - An HTML page with links to multiple PDF files - is this an example of a "set of documents"? Does it differ from a set of PDFs deployed together in some other way? - A PDF in which additional documents (pages or attachments, or rich media annotations) are exposed to the user based on scripting functionality (as opposed to links). - I take qualifying "set of documents" and republish (bundle) them together into a super-set, thus meeting the conditions for Note 1. Does this mean WCAG2ICT should not apply? Or, does it continue to apply only within each element of the super-set, and not to the super-set itself? Does it matter whether or not the super-set is a "publication" or not?