Based on the proposed CSS
:focus-visible
pseudo-selector,
this prototype adds a focus-visible
class to the focused element,
in situations in which the :focus-visible
pseudo-selector should match.
- Read the Explainer.
- Read the Spec.
- Try the Demo.
- Give feedback!
npm install --save focus-visible
We recommend only using versions of the polyfill that have been published to npm, rather than cloning the repo and using the source directly. This helps ensure the version you're using is stable and thoroughly tested.
If you do want to build from source, make sure you clone the latest tag!
...
<script src="/node_modules/focus-visible/dist/focus-visible.min.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
We suggest that users
selectively disable the default focus style
by selecting for the case when the polyfill is loaded
and .focus-visible
is not applied to the element:
/*
This will hide the focus indicator if the element receives focus via the mouse,
but it will still show up on keyboard focus.
*/
.js-focus-visible :focus:not(.focus-visible) {
outline: none;
}
If there are elements which should always have a focus ring shown,
authors may explicitly add the focus-visible
class.
If explicitly added, it will not be removed on blur
.
Alternatively, if you're using a framework which overwrites your classes (#179),
you can rely on the data-js-focus-visible
and data-focus-visible-added
attributes.
[data-js-focus-visible] :focus:not([data-focus-visible-added]) {
outline: none;
}
The script uses two heuristics to determine whether the keyboard is being (or will be) used:
-
a
focus
event immediately following akeydown
event where the key pressed was eitherTab
,Shift + Tab
, or an arrow key. -
focus moves into an element which requires keyboard interaction, such as a text field
- NOTE: this means that HTML elements like
<input type={text|email|password|...}>
or<textarea>
will always match the:focus-visible
selector, regardless of whether they are focused via a keyboard or a mouse.
- NOTE: this means that HTML elements like
-
TODO: ideally, we also trigger keyboard modality following a keyboard event which activates an element or causes a mutation; this still needs to be implemented.
If you want to use :focus-visible
with an older browser you'll need to include an additional polyfill for Element.prototype.classList
.
In accordance with the W3C's new polyfill
guidance, the
:focus-visible
polyfill does not bundle other polyfills.
You can use a service like Polyfill.io to download only the polyfills needed by the current browser. Just add the following line to the start of your page:
<script src="https://cdn.polyfill.io/v2/polyfill.min.js?features=Element.prototype.classList"></script>
It could be very expensive to apply this polyfill automatically to every shadow root that is created in a given document, so the polyfill ignores shadow roots by default. If you are using Shadow DOM in a component, it is possible to apply this polyfill imperatively to the component's shadow root:
// Check for the polyfill:
if (window.applyFocusVisiblePolyfill != null) {
window.applyFocusVisiblePolyfill(myComponent.shadowRoot);
}
When this polyfill is lazy-loaded, and you are applying the polyfill to a shadow root with JavaScript, it is important to know when the polyfill has become available before trying to use it.
In order to act at the right time, you can observe the global
focus-visible-polyfill-ready
event:
window.addEventListener('focus-visible-polyfill-ready',
() => window.applyFocusVisiblePolyfill(myComponent.shadowRoot),
{ once: true });
Important: this event is only intended to support late application of the polyfill in lazy-loading use cases. Do not write code that depends on the event firing, as it is timing dependent and only fired once. If you plan to lazy-load the polyfill, it is recommended that you check for it synchronously (see example above under "Shadow DOM") and listen for the event only if the polyfill isn't available yet.
Until all browsers ship :focus-visible
developers will need to use it defensively to avoid accidentally
removing focus styles in legacy browsers. This is easy to do with the polyfill.
/*
This will hide the focus indicator if the element receives focus via the mouse,
but it will still show up on keyboard focus.
*/
.js-focus-visible :focus:not(.focus-visible) {
outline: none;
}
/*
Optionally: Define a strong focus indicator for keyboard focus.
If you choose to skip this step then the browser's default focus
indicator will be displayed instead.
*/
.js-focus-visible .focus-visible {
…
}
As explained by the Paciello Group, developers who don't use the polyfill can still defensively rely on :focus-visible
using the
following snippet:
/*
Provide basic, default focus styles.
*/
button:focus {
…
}
/*
Remove default focus styles for mouse users ONLY if
:focus-visible is supported on this platform.
*/
button:focus:not(:focus-visible) {
…
}
/*
Optionally: If :focus-visible is supported on this
platform, provide enhanced focus styles for keyboard
focus.
*/
button:focus-visible {
…
}
In the future, when all browsers support :focus-visible
, the
snippets above will be unnecessary. But until that time it's important
to be mindful when you use :focus-visible
and to ensure you always
have a fallback strategy.
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