• Stars
    star
    1,036
  • Rank 44,478 (Top 0.9 %)
  • Language
    JavaScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 9 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A fully accessible React modal built according WAI-ARIA Authoring Practices

react-aria-modal


SEEKING CO-MAINTAINERS! Continued development of this project is going to require the work of one or more dedicated co-maintainers (or forkers). If you're interested, please comment in this issue.


A fully accessible and flexible React modal built according WAI-ARIA Authoring Practices.

This module provides a minimally styled "container" component to wrap your fully-styled "presentational" component. It provides the following features, while giving you complete control of the content:

  • Focus is trapped within the modal: Tab and Shift+Tab will cycle through the modal's focusable nodes without returning to the main document beneath.
  • Escape will close the modal.
  • Scrolling is frozen on the main document beneath the modal.
  • When the modal closes, focus returns to the element that was focused just before the modal activated.
  • The dialog element has an ARIA role of dialog (or alertdialog).
  • The dialog element has an ARIA attribute designating its title, either aria-label or aria-labelledby.
  • By default, clicking on the modal's underlay (outside the dialog element) will close the modal (this can be disabled).
  • The modal is appended to the end of document.body instead of its taking up its source-order position within the React component tree.

"Flexible" mostly means that this module provides absolutely minimal inline styles β€” just enough to get the thing working β€” but does not provide "complete" modal styling that would get in your way. You get to (have to) style the dialog yourself. (Maybe make a fancy-looking modal module that others could use, which depends on this one behind the scenes?)

Check out the demo.

Project Goals

  • Full accessibility
  • Maximum flexibility
  • Absolutely minimal styling
  • Modular construction: this module is built on top of a few small JS modules that could be used by other React and non-React frontend components:

If you like this kind of module (accessible, flexible, unstyled) you should also check out these projects:

Installation

npm install react-aria-modal

dist/react-aria-modal.js is the Babel-compiled file that you'll use.

React Dependency

Version 2+ is compatible with React >0.14.

Version 1+ is compatible with React 0.13.

Usage

Just provide the right props (see below) and pass the content of the modal as this component's child.

Look in demo/js/ for examples and view the demo, but here's a simple example:

const React = require('react');
const ReactDOM = require('react-dom');
const AriaModal = require('../../');

class DemoOne extends React.Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);

    this.state = {
      modalActive: false
    };

    this.activateModal = this.activateModal.bind(this);
    this.deactivateModal = this.deactivateModal.bind(this);
    this.getApplicationNode = this.getApplicationNode.bind(this);
  }

  activateModal = () => {
    this.setState({ modalActive: true });
  };

  deactivateModal = () => {
    this.setState({ modalActive: false });
  };

  getApplicationNode = () => {
    return document.getElementById('application');
  };

  render() {
    const modal = this.state.modalActive
      ? <AriaModal
          titleText="demo one"
          onExit={this.deactivateModal}
          initialFocus="#demo-one-deactivate"
          getApplicationNode={this.getApplicationNode}
          underlayStyle={{ paddingTop: '2em' }}
        >
          <div id="demo-one-modal" className="modal">
            <div className="modal-body">
              <p>
                Here is a modal
                {' '}
                <a href="#">with</a>
                {' '}
                <a href="#">some</a>
                {' '}
                <a href="#">focusable</a>
                {' '}
                parts.
              </p>
            </div>
            <footer className="modal-footer">
              <button id="demo-one-deactivate" onClick={this.deactivateModal}>
                deactivate modal
              </button>
            </footer>
          </div>
        </AriaModal>
      : false;

    return (
      <div>
        <button onClick={this.activateModal}>
          activate modal
        </button>
        {modal}
      </div>
    );
  }
}

ReactDOM.render(<DemoOne />, document.getElementById('demo-one'));

Details

The modal can be activated in a couple of ways:

  • mounting the component without an mounted prop
  • passing true as the mounted prop

Similarly, the modal can be deactivated in a couple of ways:

  • unmounting the component
  • passing false as the mounted prop

Pass your dialog element as the child. And that's it.

When the modal is mounted, you'll notice the following:

  • Focus is trapped: only elements within the modal will receive focus as you tab through. This is done by focus-trap, via focus-trap-react.
  • The modal has the ARIA attributes it needs: a role of dialog (or alertdialog) and an aria-label or aria-labelledby attribute.
  • The main document's scroll is frozen (except on touchscreens). This is done by no-scroll.
  • Your content is set atop a fixed-position underlay. You can control the appearance and behavior of this underlay in various ways (see below).
  • Your content is horizontally centered. You can also vertically center it, if you wish.
  • The modal is appended to document.body, not inserted directly into the HTML source order, as you might assume; but it should still update correctly. (This makes positioning easier (no weird nested z-index troubles).)

API

Name Type (Default)
alert Boolean
applicationNode DOM Node
dialogClass String
dialogId String ('react-aria-modal-dialog')
dialogStyle Object
escapeExits Boolean (true)
focusDialog Boolean
focusTrapOptions Object
focusTrapPaused Boolean
getApplicationNode () => void
includeDefaultStyles Boolean (true)
initialFocus String
mounted Boolean
onEnter () => void
onExit (event) => void
scrollDisabled Boolean (true)
titleId String
titleText String
underlayClass String
underlayClickExits Boolean (true)
underlayColor String ('rgba(0,0,0,0.5)')
underlayStyle Object
verticallyCenter Boolean

Reference API

Any data-* or aria-* props that you provide will be passed directly to the modal's container <div>.

alert

Type: Boolean

If true, the modal will receive a role of alertdialog, instead of its default dialog. The alertdialog role should only be used when an alert, error, or warning occurs (more info).

applicationNode

Type: DOM Node

Provide your main application node here (which the modal should render outside of), and when the modal is open this application node will receive the attribute aria-hidden="true". This can help screen readers understand what's going on.

This module can't guess your application node, so you have to provide this prop to get the full accessibility benefit.

dialogClass

Type: String

Apply a class to the dialog in order to custom-style it.

Be aware that, by default, this module does apply various inline styles to the dialog element in order position it. To disable all inline styles, see includeDefaultStyles.

dialogId

Type: String

Default: react-aria-modal-dialog

Choose your own id attribute for the dialog element.

dialogStyle

Type: Object

Customize properties of the style prop that is passed to the dialog.

escapeExits

Type: Boolean

Default: true

By default, the Escape key exits the modal. Pass false, and it won't.

focusDialog

Type: Boolean

By default, when the modal activates its first focusable child will receive focus. However, if focusDialog is true, the dialog itself will receive initial focus β€” and that focus will be hidden. (This is essentially what Bootstrap does with their modal.)

See the example below.

focusTrapOptions

Type: Object

Customize properties of the focusTrapOptions prop that is passed to the modal dialog's focus trap. For example, you can use this prop if you need better control of where focus is returned.

focusTrapPaused

Type: Boolean

If true, the modal dialog's focus trap will be paused.

You won't typically need to use this prop. It used to be that the typical reason for pausing a focus trap was to enable nested focus traps; but as of focus-trap v4, the pausing and unpausing of hierachical traps is handled automatically.

getApplicationNode

Type: () => void

Same as applicationNode, but a function that returns the node instead of the node itself. This can be useful or necessary in a variety of situations, one of which is server-side React rendering. The function will not be called until after the component mounts, so it is safe to use browser globals and refer to DOM nodes within it (e.g. document.getElementById(..)), without ruining your server-side rendering.

includeDefaultStyles

Type: Boolean

Default: true

By default, styles are applied inline to the dialog and underlay portions of the component. However, you can disable all inline styles by setting includeDefaultStyles to false. If set, you must specify all styles externally, including positioning. This is helpful if your project uses external CSS assets.

Note: underlayStyle and dialogStyle can still be set inline, but these will be the only styles applied.

initialFocus

Type: String

By default, when the modal activates its first focusable child will receive focus. If, instead, you want to identify a specific element that should receive initial focus, pass a selector string to this prop. (That selector is passed to document.querySelector() to find the DOM node.)

Demo example 3 and an additional example below illustrate a good method if you want no initial visible focus. (Add tabIndex='0' to the modal's content and give it outline: 0;.)

mounted

Type: Boolean

By default, the modal is active when mounted, deactivated when unmounted. However, you can also control its active/inactive state by changing its mounted property instead.

The following two examples are near-equivalents β€”Β the first mounts and unmounts, while the second changes the mounted prop:

var MyComponent = React.createClass({
  ..
  render: function() {
    ..
    var modal = (this.state.modalActive) ? (
      <AriaModal onExit={this.myExitHandler}>
        {modalContents}
      </AriaModal>
    ) : false;
    return <div>{modal}</div>;
  },
});

var MyComponentTakeTwo = React.createClass({
  ..
  render: function() {
    ..
    return (
      <div>
        <AriaModal
          mounted={this.state.modalActive}
          onExit={this.myExitHandler}
        >
          {modalContents}
        </AriaModal>
      </div>
    );
  },
});

onEnter

Type: () => void

This function is called in the modal's componentDidMount() lifecycle method. You can use it to do whatever diverse and sundry things you feel like doing after the modal activates.

Demo Five, for example, uses it to modify class names and enable some CSS transitions.

onExit

Type: (event) => void

This function handles the state change of exiting (or deactivating) the modal. It will be invoked when the user clicks outside the modal (if underlayClickExits={true}, as is the default) or hits Escape (if escapeExits={true}, as is the default), and it receives the event that triggered it as its only argument.

Maybe it's just a wrapper around setState(); or maybe you use some more involved Flux-inspired state management β€” whatever the case, this module leaves the state management up to you instead of making assumptions. That also makes it easier to create your own "close modal" buttons; because you have the function that closes the modal right there, written by you, at your disposal.

You may omit this prop if you don't want clicks outside the modal or Escape to close it, so don't want to provide a function.

scrollDisabled

Type: Boolean

Default: true

If true, the modal dialog will prevent any scrolling behind the modal window.

titleId

Type: String

The id of the element that should be used as the modal's accessible title. This value is passed to the modal's aria-labelledby attribute.

You must use either titleId or titleText, but not both.

titleText

Type: String

A string to use as the modal's accessible title. This value is passed to the modal's aria-label attribute.

You must use either titleId or titleText, but not both.

underlayClass

Type: String

Apply a class to the underlay in order to custom-style it.

This module does apply various inline styles, though, so be aware that overriding some styles might be difficult. If, for example, you want to change the underlay's color, you should probably use the underlayColor prop instead of a class. If you would rather control all CSS, see includeDefaultStyles.

underlayClickExits

Type: Boolean

Default: true

By default, a click on the underlay will exit the modal. Pass false, and clicking on the underlay will do nothing.

underlayColor

Type: String (color value) or false

Default: rgba(0,0,0,0.5)

If you want to change the underlay's color, you can do that with this prop.

If false, no background color will be applied with inline styles. Presumably you will apply then yourself via an underlayClass.

underlayStyle

Type: Object

Customize properties of the style prop that is passed to the underlay.

The best way to add some vertical displacement to the dialog is to add top & bottom padding to the underlay. This is illustrated in the demo examples.

verticallyCenter

Type: Boolean

If true, the modal's contents will be vertically (as well as horizontally) centered.

AriaModal.renderTo(HTMLElement | string)

react-aria-modal uses react-displace to insert the modal into a new element at the end of <body>, making it easier to deal with positioning and z-indexes.

The static renderTo function returns a new component that renders modals into a specific element, rather than a newly created element at the bottom of the page.

Strings are used as selectors, passed to querySelector.

See demo six for an example.

More examples

An alert dialog that itself receives initial focus (but has no visible outline) and does not exit when the underlay is clicked, and is vertically centered:

var AriaModal = require('react-aria-modal');

var MyModal = React.createClass({
  ..
  render: function() {
    return (
      <AriaModal
        onExit={this.myExitHandler}
        alert={true}
        focusDialog={true}
        titleId='modal-title'
        underlayClickExits={false}
        verticallyCenter={true}
      >
        <div
          style={{ outline: 0 }}
          className='my-modal-dialog'
        >
          <h2 id='modal-title'>Alert!</h2>
          ..
        </div>
      </AriaModal>
    )
  }
})

Contributing & Development

Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.

Lint with npm run lint.

Test the demos with npm start.

Build with npm build.

More Repositories

1

scalable-css-reading-list

Collected dispatches from The Quest for Scalable CSS
1,534
star
2

react-aria-menubutton

A fully accessible, easily themeable, React-powered menu button
JavaScript
456
star
3

no-scroll

Disable scrolling on an element that would otherwise scroll
HTML
245
star
4

react-aria-tabpanel

A fully accessible, extravagantly flexible, React-powered Tab Panel component
JavaScript
121
star
5

list-selectors

List the selectors used in your CSS. Use as a standalone function, CLI, or PostCSS plugin.
JavaScript
97
star
6

react-displace

A higher order component that displaces your component into a remote region of the DOM
JavaScript
51
star
7

jquery.cssAnimateAuto

A jQuery plugin that uses CSS transitions to animate an element's height or width to auto.
JavaScript
50
star
8

focus-group

Create a group of nodes with special focusing powers
JavaScript
45
star
9

postcss-simple-extend

A PostCSS plugin for extending placeholder selectors
JavaScript
34
star
10

stylelint-checkstyle-formatter

Output Checkstyle XML reports of stylelint results
JavaScript
16
star
11

stylelint-statement-max-nesting-depth

A stylelint custom rule to limit nesting depth
JavaScript
14
star
12

teeny-tap

Listen for both clicks and click-like touches (not scrolls or drags)
JavaScript
13
star
13

postcss-log-warnings

Log PostCSS warnings in the console
JavaScript
13
star
14

grunt-spritesmith-hd

An adaptation of grunt-spritesmith to produce hd-ready sprites
JavaScript
10
star
15

locate-chrome

Locate the Google Chrome browser on your system
JavaScript
10
star
16

gifs

Some gifs
8
star
17

jquery.animateAuto

A jQuery plugin for using jQuery animation to animate an element's height or width between something and `auto`.
JavaScript
7
star
18

style-search

Search CSS(-like) strings
JavaScript
7
star
19

babel-plugin-transform-syntax-highlight

Perform syntax highlighting of string and template literals during Babel compilation, rather than at runtime
JavaScript
5
star
20

remark-preset-davidtheclark

My remark preset, for keeping Markdown documentation tidy.
JavaScript
4
star
21

react-rootless-state

A React state container that lives outside the component tree
JavaScript
4
star
22

js-automation-examples

JavaScript
3
star
23

postcss-simple-mixin

A PostCSS plugin that can clone declarations from abstract definitions into any rule sets that follow
JavaScript
3
star
24

turborepo-jest-test

TypeScript
2
star
25

babel-plugin-transform-markdown-in-jsx

Transform Markdown inside JSX to DOM elements at compile time
JavaScript
2
star
26

unfinishedToggler

A simple style-agnostic jQuery-based plugin for toggling groups of elements on and off.
JavaScript
1
star
27

gentlereader

The Gentle Reader
JavaScript
1
star
28

locate-safari

Find Safari on your system
JavaScript
1
star
29

locate-firefox

Find Firefox on your system
JavaScript
1
star
30

eslint-config-davidtheclark-node

My ESLint config for Node (v4+)
JavaScript
1
star
31

locate-ie

Approximates the current location of Internet Explorer on your system
JavaScript
1
star
32

stylelint-html

Experiment
1
star