This package is a fork of discord/focus-rings. It has been extended with :focus-visible
functionality using the focus-visible polyfill and also added the borderColor & borderWidth props to FocusRingScope
A centralized system for displaying and stylizing focus indicators anywhere on a webpage.
When working on creating a complete keyboard navigation experience for Discord, we ran into a number of problems with rendering clean and consistent focus rings and were unable to find any suitable native alternatives. After a lot of trial and error, we landed on this system as a way to meet all of our needs. You can read more about the process we went through in this blog post.
This package is published under
react-focus-rings
and can be installed with any
npm-compatible package manager.
This library is composed of two components: FocusRing
and FocusRingScope
.
FocusRingScope
is responsible for providing a frame of reference for calculating the position of
any FocusRing
instances it contains. The containerRef
prop takes a
React.Ref
that references the DOM element that
should be used for these position calculations. You'll want to include a FocusRingScope
instance
at the top level of your application. If a component creates a new scroll container, or is
absolutely positioned within the viewport, you should add a new FocusRingScope
.
function ScopeExample() {
const containerRef = React.useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
return (
<div ref={containerRef} id="main">
<FocusRingScope borderColor={"red"} borderWidth={4} containerRef={containerRef}>{/* ... */}</FocusRingScope>
</div>
);
}
Keep in mind that the element provided to containerRef
must be styled with
position: relative
or else the alignment calculations will be incorrect. If you find that
FocusRing
isn't being rendered at all or its positioning is wrong, verify that you have a
FocusRingScope
in the correct places and that the containerRef
element has the
position: relative
style.
The FocusRing
is the main show. You can wrap any focusable element with a FocusRing
and it will
add the required focus
/blur
listeners and magically render the focus ring when the element
receives focus. We recommend integrating this at the design primitive level, in custom components
like Button
or Link
, so you get the focus ring behavior across your application with minimal
effort.
function Button(props: ButtonProps) {
return (
<FocusRing>
<button {...props} />
</FocusRing>
);
}
FocusRing
has a few props you can use to get the right behavior and alignment. If using TypeScript
the type is exported as FocusRingProps
import { FocusRingProps } from "react-focus-rings";
within
- acts like:focus-within
and will render the focus ring if any descendant is focusedenabled
- controls whether theFocusRing
is being renderedfocused
- controls the focused stateoffset
- lets you adjust the alignment of the focus ring, relative to the focused element. Can be anumber
orOffset
objectfocusTarget
- lets you choose a different element to act as the focus target for the ring. Must be used withringTarget
.ringTarget
- lets you choose a different element to render the ring around. Must be used withfocusTarget
.focusWithinClassName
- lets you apply a CSS class to the focused element when a descendant is focused. Like:focus-within
.
The focus ring also relies on some default CSS styles in order to render properly. To make this work
in your project, be sure to import the styles separately somwhere within your app with
import "focus-rings/src/styles.css";
.
A complete, minimal example might look like this:
import * as React from "react";
import ReactDOM from "react-dom";
import { FocusRing, FocusRingScope } from "react-focus-rings";
import "focus-rings/src/styles.css";
function App() {
const containerRef = React.useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
return (
<div className="app-container" ref={containerRef}>
<FocusRingScope containerRef={containerRef}>
<div className="content">
<p>Here's a paragraph with some text.</p>
<FocusRing offset={-2}>
<button onClick={console.log}>Click Me</button>
</FocusRing>
<p>Here's another paragraph with more text.</p>
</div>
</FocusRingScope>
</div>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.body);
You can find a more complete example in the
examples
directory of this
repository. You can find a
hosted version of the example application here.