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Accessibility in Angular
The web is used by a wide variety of people, including those who have visual or motor impairments. A variety of assistive technologies are available that make it much easier for these groups to interact with web-based software applications. In addition, designing an application to be more accessible generally improves the user experience for all users.
For an in-depth introduction to issues and techniques for designing accessible applications, see the Accessibility section of the Google's Web Fundamentals.
This page discusses best practices for designing Angular applications that work well for all users, including those who rely on assistive technologies.
For the sample app that this page describes, see the .
Accessibility attributes
Building accessible web experience often involves setting ARIA attributes to provide semantic meaning where it might otherwise be missing. Use attribute binding template syntax to control the values of accessibility-related attributes.
When binding to ARIA attributes in Angular, you must use the attr.
prefix, as the ARIA
specification depends specifically on HTML attributes rather than properties of DOM elements.
<!-- Use attr. when binding to an ARIA attribute -->
<button [attr.aria-label]="myActionLabel">...</button>
Note that this syntax is only necessary for attribute bindings. Static ARIA attributes require no extra syntax.
<!-- Static ARIA attributes require no extra syntax -->
<button aria-label="Save document">...</button>
NOTE:
By convention, HTML attributes use lowercase names (tabindex
), while properties use camelCase names (tabIndex
).
See the Template Syntax guide for more background on the difference between attributes and properties.
Angular UI components
The Angular Material library, which is maintained by the Angular team, is a suite of reusable UI components that aims to be fully accessible.
The Component Development Kit (CDK) includes the a11y
package that provides tools to support various areas of accessibility.
For example:
-
LiveAnnouncer
is used to announce messages for screen-reader users using anaria-live
region. See the W3C documentation for more information on aria-live regions. -
The
cdkTrapFocus
directive traps Tab-key focus within an element. Use it to create accessible experience for components like modal dialogs, where focus must be constrained.
For full details of these and other tools, see the Angular CDK accessibility overview.
Augmenting native elements
Native HTML elements capture a number of standard interaction patterns that are important to accessibility. When authoring Angular components, you should re-use these native elements directly when possible, rather than re-implementing well-supported behaviors.
For example, instead of creating a custom element for a new variety of button, you can create a component that uses an attribute selector with a native <button>
element.
This most commonly applies to <button>
and <a>
, but can be used with many other types of element.
You can see examples of this pattern in Angular Material: MatButton
, MatTabNav
, MatTable
.
Using containers for native elements
Sometimes using the appropriate native element requires a container element.
For example, the native <input>
element cannot have children, so any custom text entry components need
to wrap an <input>
with additional elements.
While you might just include the <input>
in your custom component's template,
this makes it impossible for users of the component to set arbitrary properties and attributes to the input element.
Instead, you can create a container component that uses content projection to include the native control in the
component's API.
You can see MatFormField
as an example of this pattern.
Case study: Building a custom progress bar
The following example shows how to make a simple progress bar accessible by using host binding to control accessibility-related attributes.
-
The component defines an accessibility-enabled element with both the standard HTML attribute
role
, and ARIA attributes. The ARIA attributearia-valuenow
is bound to the user's input. -
In the template, the
aria-label
attribute ensures that the control is accessible to screen readers.
Routing and focus management
Tracking and controlling focus in a UI is an important consideration in designing for accessibility. When using Angular routing, you should decide where page focus goes upon navigation.
To avoid relying solely on visual cues, you need to make sure your routing code updates focus after page navigation.
Use the NavigationEnd
event from the Router
service to know when to update
focus.
The following example shows how to find and focus the main content header in the DOM after navigation.
router.events.pipe(filter(e => e instanceof NavigationEnd)).subscribe(() => {
const mainHeader = document.querySelector('#main-content-header')
if (mainHeader) {
mainHeader.focus();
}
});
In a real application, the element that receives focus will depend on your specific
application structure and layout.
The focused element should put users in a position to immediately move into the main content that has just been routed into view.
You should avoid situations where focus returns to the body
element after a route change.
Additional resources
-
Codelyzer provides linting rules that can help you make sure your code meets accessibility standards.
Books
-
"A Web for Everyone: Designing Accessible User Experiences", Sarah Horton and Whitney Quesenbery
-
"Inclusive Design Patterns", Heydon Pickering
More on accessibility
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