A accessible tab container element with keyboard support. Follows the ARIA best practices guide on tabs.
$ npm install @github/tab-container-element
import '@github/tab-container-element'
<tab-container>
<button type="button" id="tab-one" role="tab" aria-selected="true">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-two" role="tab" tabindex="-1">Tab two</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-three" role="tab" tabindex="-1">Tab three</button>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-one">
Panel 1
</div>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-two" hidden>
Panel 2
</div>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-three" hidden>
Panel 3
</div>
</tab-container>
If none of the tabs have aria-selected=true
, then the first tab will be selected automatically. You can also add the default-tab=N
attribute to avoid having to set aria-selected=true
on the desired tab, where N
is the 0-based tab index:
<!-- The _second_ tab will be selected -->
<tab-container default-tab="1">
<button type="button" id="tab-one" role="tab">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-two" role="tab">Tab two</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-three" role="tab">Tab three</button>
<!-- ... -->
</tab-container>
tab-container-change
(bubbles, cancelable): fired on<tab-container>
before a new tab is selected and visibility is updated.event.tab
is the tab that will be focused,event.tabIndex
is the 0-based index of thetab
andtab.panel
is the panel that will be shown if the event isn't cancelled.tab-container-changed
(bubbles): fired on<tab-container>
after a new tab is selected and visibility is updated.event.tab
is the tab that is now active (and will be focused right after this event),event.tabIndex
is the 0-based index of thetab
andevent.panel
is the newly visible tab panel.
::part(tablist-wrapper)
is the wrapper which containsbefore-tabs
,tablist
andafter-tabs
.::part(tablist)
is the container which wraps all tabs. This element appears in ATs as it isrole=tablist
.::part(panel)
is the container housing the currently active tabpanel.::part(before-tabs)
is the container housing any elements that appear before the firstrole=tab
. This also can be directly slotted withslot=before-tabs
. This container lives outside the element with role=tablist to adhere to ARIA guidelines.::part(after-tabs)
is the container housing any elements that appear after the lastrole=tab
. This also can be directly slotted withslot=after-tabs
. This container lives outside the element with role=tablist to adhere to ARIA guidelines.::part(after-panels)
is the container housing any elements that appear after the lastrole=tabpanel
. This can be useful if you want to add a visual treatment to the container but have content always appear visually below the active panel.
When activated, the whole tab panel will receive focus. This may be undesirable, in the case where the tab panel is itself composed of interactive elements, such as an action list or radio buttons.
In those cases, apply data-tab-container-no-tabstop
to the tabpanel
element.
<tab-container>
<button type="button" id="tab-one" role="tab" aria-selected="true">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-two" role="tab" tabindex="-1">Tab two</button>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-one" data-tab-container-no-tabstop>
<ul role="menu" aria-label="Branches">
<li tabindex="0">branch-one</li>
<li tabindex="0">branch-two</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-two" data-tab-container-no-tabstop hidden>
<ul role="menu" aria-label="Commits">
<li tabindex="0">Commit One</li>
<li tabindex="0">Commit Two</li>
</ul>
</div>
</tab-container>
If <tab-container>
is given the vertical
attribute it will apply the aria-orientation=vertical
attribute to the tablist. This will present to ATs as a vertical tablist, and you can use the attribute to style the tabs accordingly.
In those cases, apply data-tab-container-no-tabstop
to the tabpanel
element.
<tab-container vertical>
<button type="button" id="tab-one" role="tab" aria-selected="true">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" id="tab-two" role="tab" tabindex="-1">Tab two</button>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-one" data-tab-container-no-tabstop>
<ul role="menu" aria-label="Branches">
<li tabindex="0">branch-one</li>
<li tabindex="0">branch-two</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div role="tabpanel" aria-labelledby="tab-two" data-tab-container-no-tabstop hidden>
<ul role="menu" aria-label="Commits">
<li tabindex="0">Commit One</li>
<li tabindex="0">Commit Two</li>
</ul>
</div>
</tab-container>
<tab-container>
aims to simplify complex markup away in the ShadowDOM, so that the HTML you end up writing is overall less. However sometimes it can be useful to have full control over the markup. Each of the ::part
selectors are also <slot>
s, this means you can take any part and slot it, overriding the built-in ShadowDOM.
You are able to provide your own role=tablist
and <tab-container>
will accommodate. This can be useful if you need extra presentational markup in the tablist. But remember:
- You must ensure that all child elements are
role=tab
orrole=presentational
. - The element will still slot contents before and after this element, in order to correctly present the tablist.
<tab-container>
<div role="tablist">
<my-icon name="tabs" role="presentational"></my-icon>
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab two</button>
</div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
</tab-container>
You are able to slot the tablist-tab-wrapper
part. This slot manages the tabs but not the before or after elements. In this way, you can put custom HTML inside the tab list. Bear in mind if you're supplying this element that:
- You must also supply a
role=tablist
as a child. - You must ensure that all child elements are
role=tab
orrole=presentational
. - The element will still slot contents before and after this element, in order to correctly present the tablist.
<tab-container>
<div slot="tablist-tab-wrapper">
<div role="tablist">
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab two</button>
</div>
</div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
</tab-container>
If you want to take full control over the entire tab region, including managing the content before and after the tabs, then you can slot the tablist-wrapper
element. Bear in mind if you're supplying this element that:
<tab-container>
will only manage slotting ofrole=panel
. It won't manage elements before or after the tabs or panels.- You won't be able to also slot the
tablist-tab-wrapper
. You can chose to omit this element though. - You must also supply a
role=tablist
as a descendant. - You must ensure that all child elements of the tablist
role=tab
orrole=presentational
. - The element will still slot contents before and after this element, in order to correctly present the tablist.
<tab-container>
<div slot="tablist-wrapper">
<div role="tablist">
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab one</button>
<button type="button" role="tab">Tab two</button>
</div>
</div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
<div role="tabpanel"></div>
</tab-container>
Browsers without native custom element support require a polyfill.
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- Microsoft Edge
npm install
npm test
Distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.