First, grab the package from npm:
npm install --save react-accessible-accordion
Then, import the editor and use it in your code. Here is a basic example:
import React from 'react';
import {
Accordion,
AccordionItem,
AccordionItemHeading,
AccordionItemButton,
AccordionItemPanel,
} from 'react-accessible-accordion';
// Demo styles, see 'Styles' section below for some notes on use.
import 'react-accessible-accordion/dist/fancy-example.css';
export default function Example() {
return (
<Accordion>
<AccordionItem>
<AccordionItemHeading>
<AccordionItemButton>
What harsh truths do you prefer to ignore?
</AccordionItemButton>
</AccordionItemHeading>
<AccordionItemPanel>
<p>
Exercitation in fugiat est ut ad ea cupidatat ut in
cupidatat occaecat ut occaecat consequat est minim minim
esse tempor laborum consequat esse adipisicing eu
reprehenderit enim.
</p>
</AccordionItemPanel>
</AccordionItem>
<AccordionItem>
<AccordionItemHeading>
<AccordionItemButton>
Is free will real or just an illusion?
</AccordionItemButton>
</AccordionItemHeading>
<AccordionItemPanel>
<p>
In ad velit in ex nostrud dolore cupidatat consectetur
ea in ut nostrud velit in irure cillum tempor laboris
sed adipisicing eu esse duis nulla non.
</p>
</AccordionItemPanel>
</AccordionItem>
</Accordion>
);
}
We strongly encourage you to write your own styles for your accordions, but we've published the styles used on our demo page to help you get up and running:
import 'react-accessible-accordion/dist/fancy-example.css';
We recommend that you copy them into your own app and modify them to suit your
needs, particularly if you're using your own className
s.
Don't autocollapse items when expanding other items.
Allow the only remaining expanded item to be collapsed.
Accepts an array of strings and any AccordionItem
whose uuid
prop matches
any one of these strings will be expanded on mount.
Class(es) to apply to element.
Callback which is invoked when items are expanded or collapsed. Gets passed
uuid
s of the currently expanded AccordionItem
s.
Class(es) to apply to element.
Recommended for use with onChange
. Will be auto-generated if not provided.
Enables external control of the expansion.
Warning: This may impact accessibility negatively, use at your own risk
Class(es) to apply to the 'heading' element.
Semantics to apply to the 'heading' element. A value of 1
would make your
heading element hierarchically equivalent to an <h1>
tag, and likewise a value
of 6
would make it equivalent to an <h6>
tag.
Class(es) to apply to the 'button' element.
Class(es) to apply to element.
Make the element have a region role.
Resets the internal counter for Accordion items' identifiers (including id
attributes). For use in test suites and isomorphic frameworks.
Authoring an 'accordion' component to the
WAI ARIA spec can be
complex, but React Accessible Accordion
does most of the heavy lifting for
you, including:
- Applying appropriate aria attributes (
aria-expanded
,aria-controls
,aria-disabled
,aria-hidden
andaria-labelledby
). - Applying appropriate
role
attributes (button
,heading
,region
). - Applying appropriate
tabindex
attributes. - Applying keyboard interactivity ('space', 'end', 'tab', 'up', 'down', 'home' and 'end' keys).
However, there's still a couple of things you need to keep in mind to remain spec-compliant:
- Only ever use
phrasing content
inside of your
AccordionItemHeading
component. If in doubt, use text only. - Always provide an
aria-level
prop to yourAccordionItemHeading
component, especially if you are nesting accordions. This attribute is a signal used by assistive technologies (eg. screenreaders) to determine which heading level (ie.h1
-h6
) to treat your heading as.
If you have any questions about your implementation, then please don't be afraid to get in touch via our issues.
Those described by the WAI ARIA spec's description of an 'accordion':
An accordion is a vertically stacked set of interactive headings that each contain a title, content snippet, or thumbnail representing a section of content. The headings function as controls that enable users to reveal or hide their associated sections of content. Accordions are commonly used to reduce the need to scroll when presenting multiple sections of content on a single page.
Components which are "accordion-like" but do not match the WAI ARIA spec's description, as written above. By "accordion-like", we mean components which have collapsible items but require bespoke interactive mechanisms in order to expand, collapse and 'disable' them. This includes (but is not limited to) multi-step forms, like those seen in many cart/checkout flows, which we believe require (other) complex markup in order to be considered 'accessible'. This also includes disclosure widgets.
See "Which design patterns does this component NOT aim to solve?".
Supported browser / device versions:
Browser | Device/OS | Version |
---|---|---|
Mobile Safari | iOS | latest |
Chrome | Android | latest |
IE | Windows | 11 |
MS Edge | Windows | latest |
Chrome | Desktop | latest |
Firefox | Desktop | latest |
Safari | OSX | latest |