<details>
/<summary>
jQuery plugin
This plugin polyfills <details>
/<summary>
HTML elements and adds the appropriate ARIA annotations for optimal accessibility. More information can be found in my blog post on the subject.
Demo & Examples
http://mathiasbynens.be/demo/html5-details-jquery
Example Usage
In its simplest form:
// Polyfill a given set of elements
$('details').details();
The plugin will automatically detect browser support and act accordingly. If other parts of your code need to know whether <details>
/<summary>
are supported or not, use $.fn.details.support
:
// Detect whether `<details>`/`<summary>` are natively supported
console.log($.fn.details.support ? 'Native support' : 'No native support');
// Conditionally add a classname to the `html` element, based on native support
$('html').addClass($.fn.details.support ? 'details' : 'no-details');
The plugin will provide open.details
and close.details
events for you to use:
$('details').on({
'open.details': function() {
console.log('opened');
},
'close.details': function() {
console.log('closed');
}
});
Any handlers bound to these events will fire even in browsers that natively support <details>
.
Since both events live under the details
namespace, you can easily unbind all handlers that are specific to this plugin:
$('details').off('.details');
Notes
The plugin doesn’t require you to add any CSS to your document. It will add a class="open"
to any open <details>
elements though (in addition to the open
attribute), so you can very easily target these using CSS if you want.
This plugin includes my noSelect jQuery plugin.
This plugin automatically feature tests for native <details>
/<summary>
support and only enables the fallback when it’s necessary. You don’t have to write any feature tests yourself.
This plugin requires jQuery 1.9+. For a version that works with jQuery 1.8 or older, see v0.0.6. For a version that works with jQuery 1.6 or older, see v0.0.1.
This fallback works in all A-grade browsers, including IE6. It will only be executed if the <details>
element is not natively supported in the browser. If it isn’t, and JavaScript is disabled, all elements will still be visible to the user.
While the plugin has a certain level of support for <details>
elements without a <summary>
, it should be noted that omitting the <summary>
element results in invalid HTML, and prevents the custom open.details
/close.details
events from firing in browsers that natively support <details>
. Don’t do this!
License
This plugin is dual licensed under the MIT and GPL licenses, just like jQuery itself.
– Mathias