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@jmsjtu/aria-reflection
Advanced tools
Polyfill for ARIA string reflection on Elements. This is part of the Accessibility Object Model (AOM).
For example:
element.setAttribute('aria-pressed', 'true');
console.log(element.ariaPressed); // true
element.ariaPressed = false;
console.log(element.getAttribute('aria-pressed')); // false
Note that the attribute aria-pressed
is reflected to the property ariaPressed
, and vice versa.
npm install @jmsjtu/aria-reflection
import { applyAriaReflection } from '@jmsjtu/aria-reflection';
applyAriaReflection();
The polyfill is applied as soon as the function is executed.
Optionally, you can pass in a custom prototype:
applyAriaReflection(MyCustomElement.prototype);
By default, the polyfill is applied to the global Element.prototype
.
The polyfill patches these standard properties:
As well as these currently non-standard properties:
To determine which browsers already support ARIA reflection, see this test.
FAQs
ARIA element reflection polyfill for strings
The npm package @jmsjtu/aria-reflection receives a total of 1 weekly downloads. As such, @jmsjtu/aria-reflection popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @jmsjtu/aria-reflection demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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