
Security News
/Research
Popular node-ipc npm Package Infected with Credential Stealer
Socket detected malicious node-ipc versions with obfuscated stealer/backdoor behavior in a developing npm supply chain attack.
@lighting-beetle/accessible-autocomplete
Advanced tools
An autocomplete component, built to be accessible.
accessible-autocomplete is a JavaScript autocomplete built from the ground up to be accessible. The design goals are:
Install it by running:
npm install @lighting-beetle/accessible-autocomplete
The accessibleAutocomplete function will render an autocomplete <input> and its accompanying suggestions and aria-live region. Your page should provide a <label> and a container element:
<label for="my-autocomplete">Select your country</label>
<div id="my-autocomplete-container"></div>
Then import it using a module system like Browserify / Webpack / Rollup, and call the accessibleAutocomplete function, providing an array of values:
import accessibleAutocomplete from 'accessible-autocomplete'
const countries = [
'France',
'Germany',
'United Kingdom'
]
accessibleAutocomplete({
element: document.querySelector('#my-autocomplete-container'),
id: 'my-autocomplete', // To match it to the existing <label>.
source: countries
})
If you want to use it as a replacement for a <select> element, read the Progressive enhancement section.
You can copy the dist/accessible-autocomplete.min.js file to your JavaScript folder and import it into the browser:
<script type="text/javascript" src="assets/js/accessible-autocomplete.min.js"></script>
A stylesheet is included with the package at dist/accessible-autocomplete.min.css.
You can copy it to your stylesheets folder and import it into the browser:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="assets/css/accessible-autocomplete.min.css" />
You can also import it using Sass:
@import "accessible-autocomplete";
If you already use Preact in your application, you can import a bundle that will use that:
import preact from 'preact'
import Autocomplete from 'accessible-autocomplete/preact'
preact.render(
<Autocomplete id='autocomplete' source={suggest} />,
document.querySelector('#container')
)
If you already use React in your application, you can import a bundle that will use that:
import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'
import Autocomplete from 'accessible-autocomplete/react'
ReactDOM.render(
<Autocomplete id='autocomplete' source={suggest} />,
document.querySelector('#container')
)
React v15.5.4 has been tested to work with the Accessible Autocomplete - although make sure to check out documented issues.
React v15.6.2 and 16.0 have been incompletely tested with the Accessible Autocomplete: while no undocumented issues were found, we recommend you carry out thorough testing if you wish to use these or later versions of React.
elementType: HTMLElement
The container element in which the autocomplete will be rendered in.
idType: string
The id to assign to the autocomplete input field, to use with a <label for=id>. Not required if using enhanceSelectElement.
sourceType: Array | Function
An array of values to search when the user types in the input field, or a function to take what the user types and call a callback function with the results to be displayed.
An example of an array of values:
const countries = [
'France',
'Germany',
'United Kingdom'
]
If source is a function, the arguments are: query: string, populateResults: Function
Similar to the source argument for typeahead.js, a backing data source for suggestions. query is what gets typed into the input field, which will callback to populateResults synchronously with the array of string results to display in the menu.
An example of a simple suggestion engine:
function suggest (query, populateResults) {
const results = [
'France',
'Germany',
'United Kingdom'
]
const filteredResults = results.filter(result => result.indexOf(query) !== -1)
populateResults(filteredResults)
}
autoselect (default: false)Type: Boolean
Set to true to highlight the first option when the user types in something and receives results. Pressing enter will select it.
confirmOnBlur (default: true)Type: Boolean
The autocomplete will confirm the currently selected option when the user clicks outside of the component. Set to false to disable.
cssNamespace (default: 'autocomplete')Type: string
Use this property to override the BEM block name that the JavaScript component will use. You will need to rewrite the CSS class names to use your specified block name.
defaultValue (default: '')Type: string
Specify a string to prefill the autocomplete with.
displayMenu (default: 'inline')Type: 'inline' | 'overlay'
You can set this property to specify the way the menu should appear, whether inline or as an overlay.
isDisabled (default: false)Type: Boolean
Disable autocomplete.
minLength (default: 0)Type: number
The minimum number of characters that should be entered before the autocomplete will attempt to suggest options. When the query length is under this, the aria status region will also provide helpful text to the user informing them they should type in more.
name (default: 'input-autocomplete')Type: string
The name for the autocomplete input field, to use with a parent <form>.
onConfirm (default: () => {})Type: Function
Arguments: confirmed: Object
This function will be called when the user confirms an option, with the option they've confirmed.
onChange (default: undefined)Type: Function
A function that gets called with the current value of the input field as it's only argument. This is handy for integrations with other libraries (e.g. redux-form).
placeholder (default: '') :warning: not recommended :warning:Type: string
This option will populate the placeholder attribute on the input element.
We think placeholders have usability issues and that there are better alternatives to input placeholder text, so we do not recommend using this option.
required (default: false)Type: Boolean
The input field will be rendered with a required attribute, see W3C required attribute definition.
showAllValues (default: false)Type: Boolean
If this is set to true, all values are shown when the user clicks the input. This is similar
to a default dropdown, so the autocomplete is rendered with a dropdown arrow to convey
this behaviour.
showNoOptionsFound (default: true)Type: Boolean
The autocomplete will display a "No results found" template when there are no results. Set to false to disable.
templates (default: undefined)Type:
{
inputValue: Function,
suggestion: Function
}
This object defines templates (functions) that are used for displaying parts of the autocomplete.
inputValue is a function that receives one argument, the currently selected suggestion. It returns the string value to be inserted into the input.
suggestion is a function that receives one argument, a suggestion to be displayed. It is used when rendering suggestions, and should return a string, which can contain HTML. :warning: Caution: because this function allows you to output arbitrary HTML, you should make sure it's trusted, and accessible.
dropdownArrow (default: A rectangle pointing down)Type: Function
A function that gets passed an object with the property className ({ className: '' }) and should return a string of HTML or a (P)React element. :warning: Caution: because this function allows you to output arbitrary HTML, you should make sure it's trusted, and accessible.
tNoResults (default: () => 'No results found')Type: Function
A function that receives no arguments and should return the text used in the dropdown to indicate that there are no results.
tStatusQueryTooShort (default: (minQueryLength) => `Type in ${minQueryLength} or more characters for results.`)Type: Function
A function that receives one argument that indicates the minimal amount of characters needed for the dropdown to trigger and should return the text used in the accessibility hint to indicate that the query is too short.
tStatusNoResults (default: () => 'No search results.')Type: Function
A function that receives no arguments and should return the text that is used in the accessibility hint to indicate that there are no results.
tStatusSelectedOption (default: (selectedOption, length, index) => `${selectedOption} (${index + 1} of ${length}) is selected.`)Type: Function
A function that receives two arguments, the selectedOption and the amount of available options, and it should return the text used in the accessibility hint to indicate which option is selected.
tStatusResultsDefault:
(length, contentSelectedOption) => {
const words = {
result: (length === 1) ? 'result' : 'results',
is: (length === 1) ? 'is' : 'are'
}
return <span>{length} {words.result} {words.is} available. {contentSelectedOption}</span>
}
Type: Function
A function that receives two arguments, the count of available options and the return value of tStatusSelectedOption, and should return the text used in the accessibility hint to indicate which options are available and which is selected.
If your autocomplete is meant to select from a small list of options (a few hundred), we strongly suggest that you render a <select> menu on the server, and use progressive enhancement.
If you have the following HTML:
<select id="location-picker">
<option value="fr">France</option>
<option value="de">Germany</option>
<option value="gb">United Kingdom</option>
</select>
You can use the accessibleAutocomplete.enhanceSelectElement function to enhance it into an autocomplete:
accessibleAutocomplete.enhanceSelectElement({
selectElement: document.querySelector('#location-picker')
})
This will:
<select>autoselect to truedefaultValue to the select's option[selected]id to the <select>'s idname attribute to '' to prevent it being included in form submissionssource to use existing <option>s from the <select><select> using inline display: none<select>'s id to ${id}-select to decouple from any <label><select>This function takes the same options as accessibleAutocomplete, with the only difference being that it uses selectElement instead of element, which needs to be an instance of HTMLSelectElement.
Note: The
accessibleAutocomplete.enhanceSelectElementfunction is fairly light and wraps the public API foraccessibleAutocomplete. If your use case doesn't fit the above defaults, try reading the source and seeing if you can write your own.
If your <select> element has a "null" option - a default option with no value - then you can pass a defaultValue option to enhanceSelectElement which will replace the label of this option when it is selected.
With the following HTML:
<select id="location-picker">
<option value="">Select a country</option>
<option value="fr">France</option>
<option value="de">Germany</option>
<option value="gb">United Kingdom</option>
</select>
Then passing a defaultValue option of '' will then leave the autocomplete blank if the null option is selected.
accessibleAutocomplete.enhanceSelectElement({
defaultValue: '',
selectElement: document.querySelector('#location-picker')
})
Any null options will also be filtered out of the options used to populate the source of the autocomplete element. To preserve options with no value in the autcomplete then pass a preserveNullOptions flag of true to enhanceSelectElement.
The following events get triggered on the input element during the life cycle of the autocomplete:
onConfirm - This function will be called when the user confirms an option, with the option they've chosen.Example usage:
accessibleAutocomplete({
// additional options
onConfirm: (val) => {
track(val)
}
})
accessible-autocomplete was built after studying many existing solutions and prototyping patches to fix user experience or accessibility issues. It draws heavy inspiration from the following (and a lot of others):
Check out the CONTRIBUTING guide for instructions.
If you want to help and want to get more familiar with the codebase, try starting with the "good for beginners" issues.
This update brings option to controle autocomplete from outside and fix bug with not closing autocomplete.
This update brings option for disabling autocomplete.
If the user has prefilled defaultValue, or user wrote a query, autocomplete options will be rendered onFocus and onClick
MIT.
FAQs
An autocomplete component, built to be accessible.
We found that @lighting-beetle/accessible-autocomplete demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Security News
/Research
Socket detected malicious node-ipc versions with obfuscated stealer/backdoor behavior in a developing npm supply chain attack.

Security News
TeamPCP and BreachForums are promoting a Shai-Hulud supply chain attack contest with a $1,000 prize for the biggest package compromise.

Security News
Packagist urges PHP projects to update Composer after a GitHub token format change exposed some GitHub Actions tokens in CI logs.