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React A11yDialog

react-a11y-dialog provides a thin (~600b) React component and hook for a11y-dialog relying on React portals to ease the use of accessible dialog windows in React applications.

Version compatibility:

Special thanks to Moritz Kröger (@morkro), Mayank (@mayank99) and EJ Mason (@mxmason) for their kind help in making that library better.

Install

npm install --save react-a11y-dialog

API

NameTypeRequiredDefaultDescription
idstringtrue<details><summary>Expand</summary>The HTML id attribute of the dialog element, internally used by a11y-dialog to manipulate the dialog.</details>
titlenodetrue<details><summary>Expand</summary>The title of the dialog, mandatory in the document to provide context to assistive technology. Could be hidden with CSS (while remaining accessible).</details>
dialogRootElement | stringfalsedocument.body<details><summary>Expand</summary>The container for the dialog to be rendered into (React portal’s root).</details>
dialogReffunctionfalse() => {}<details><summary>Expand</summary> A function called when the component has mounted, receiving the instance of A11yDialog so that it can be programmatically accessed later on.</details>
titleIdstringfalse${props.id}-title<details><summary>Expand</summary>The HTML id attribute of the dialog’s title element, used by assistive technologies to provide context and meaning to the dialog window.</details>
closeButtonLabelstringfalseClose this dialog window<details><summary>Expand</summary>The HTML aria-label attribute of the close button, used by assistive technologies to provide extra meaning to the usual cross-mark.</details>
closeButtonContentnodefalse\u00D7 (×)<details><summary>Expand</summary>The string that is the inner HTML of the close button.</details>
closeButtonPositionstringfalsefirst<details><summary>Expand</summary>Whether to render the close button as first element, last element or not at all. Options are: first, last and none. ⚠️ Caution! Setting it to none without providing a close button manually will be a critical accessibility issue.</details>
classNamesobjectfalse{}<details><summary>Expand</summary>Object of classes for each HTML element of the dialog element. Keys are: container, overlay, dialog, title, closeButton. See a11y-dialog docs for reference.</details>
rolestringfalsedialog<details><summary>Expand</summary>The role attribute of the dialog element, either dialog (default) or alertdialog to make it a modal (preventing closing on click outside of <kbd>ESC</kbd> key).</details>

Hook

The library exports both A11yDialog, a React component rendering a dialog while performing the a11y-dialog bindings under the hood, and a useA11yDialog hook providing only the binding logic without any markup.

Using the hook can be handy when building your own dialog. Beware though, it is an advanced feature. Make sure to stick to the expected markup.

import { useA11yDialog } from 'react-a11y-dialog'

const MyCustomDialog = props => {
  // `instance` is the `a11y-dialog` instance.
  // `attr` is an object with the following keys:
  // - `container`: the dialog container
  // - `overlay`: the dialog overlay (sometimes called backdrop)
  // - `dialog`: the actual dialog box
  // - `title`: the dialog mandatory title
  // - `closeButton`:  the dialog close button
  const [instance, attr] = useA11yDialog({
    // The required HTML `id` attribute of the dialog element, internally used
    // a11y-dialog to manipulate the dialog.
    id: 'my-dialog',
    // The optional `role` attribute of the dialog element, either `dialog`
    // (default) or `alertdialog` to make it a modal (preventing closing on
    // click outside of ESC key).
    role: 'dialog',
  })

  const dialog = ReactDOM.createPortal(
    <div {...attr.container} className='dialog-container'>
      <div {...attr.overlay} className='dialog-overlay' />

      <div {...attr.dialog} className='dialog-content'>
        <p {...attr.title} className='dialog-title'>
          Your dialog title
        </p>

        <p>Your dialog content</p>

        <button {...attr.closeButton} className='dialog-close'>
          Close dialog
        </button>
      </div>
    </div>,
    document.body
  )

  return (
    <>
      <button type='button' onClick={() => instance.show()}>
        Open dialog
      </button>
      {dialog}
    </>
  )
}

Server-side rendering

The A11yDialog React component does not render anything on the server, and waits for client-side JavaScript to kick in to render the dialog through the React portal.

Mocking portals in tests

When you’re using react-a11y-dialog in your unit tests, it might be necessary to mock React Portals and inject them to the root DOM before your tests are running. To accomplish that, create helper functions that attach all portals before a test and remove them afterwards.

const ROOT_PORTAL_IDS = ['dialog-root']

export const addPortalRoots = () => {
  for (const id of ROOT_PORTAL_IDS) {
    if (!global.document.querySelector('#' + id)) {
      const rootNode = global.document.createElement('div')
      rootNode.setAttribute('id', id)
      global.document.body.appendChild(rootNode)
    }
  }
}

export const removePortalRoots = () => {
  for (const id of rootPortalIds) {
    global.document.querySelector('#' + id)?.remove()
  }
}

And then use them in your tests.

describe('Testing MyComponent', () => {
  beforeAll(() => addPortalRoots())
  afterAll(() => removePortalRoots())
})

Example

The following example is a minimal setup of react-a11y-dialog. Additionally, you will need to add the required styles as per the recommendations from the a11y-dialog styling docs. How you integrate these styles is left to your discretion and depends on the styling layer you’ve chosen for your project (classes, inline styles, CSS Modules, CSS-in-JS…). For anything but inline styles, styles will typically need to be passed via the classNames object prop, and as such will end up being applied to the elements rendered by React.

import { A11yDialog } from 'react-a11y-dialog'

const App = props => {
  const dialog = React.useRef()

  return (
    <div>
      <button type='button' onClick={() => dialog.current.show()}>
        Open the dialog
      </button>

      <A11yDialog
        id='my-accessible-dialog'
        dialogRef={instance => (dialog.current = instance)}
        title='The dialog title'
      >
        <p>Some content for the dialog.</p>
      </A11yDialog>
    </div>
  )
}

ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.querySelector('#root'))

Migrating to v7

Version 7 now relies on a11y-dialog@8.0.0. It should be largely backward compatible with version 6 though.

Migrating to v6

Version 6 now relies on a11y-dialog@7.0.0. See the a11y-dialog migration guide. Most notable changes requiring some update: