##<iron-a11y-keys>
iron-a11y-keys
provides a cross-browser interface for processing keyboard commands. The interface adheres to WAI-ARIA best practices. It uses an expressive syntax to filter key presses.
The sample code below is a portion of a custom element. The goal is to call the onEnter
method whenever the paper-input
element is in focus and the Enter
key is pressed.
<iron-a11y-keys id="a11y" target="[[target]]" keys="enter" on-keys-pressed="onEnter"></iron-a11y-keys> <paper-input id="input" placeholder="Type something. Press enter. Check console." value="{{userInput::input}}"></paper-input>
The custom element declares an iron-a11y-keys
element that is bound to a property called target
. The target
property needs to evaluate to the paper-input
node. iron-a11y-keys
registers an event handler for the target node using Polymer‘s annotated event handler syntax. {{userInput::input}}
sets the userInput
property to the user’s input on each keystroke.
The last step is to link the two elements within the custom element's registration.
... properties: { userInput: { type: String, notify: true, }, target: { type: Object, value: function() { return this.$.input; } }, }, onEnter: function() { console.log(this.userInput); } ...
keys
attributeThe keys
attribute expresses what combination of keys triggers the event.
The attribute accepts a space-separated, plus-sign-concatenated set of modifier keys and some common keyboard keys.
The common keys are: a-z
, 0-9
(top row and number pad), *
(shift 8 and number pad), F1-F12
, Page Up
, Page Down
, Left Arrow
, Right Arrow
, Down Arrow
, Up Arrow
, Home
, End
, Escape
, Space
, Tab
, Enter
.
The modifier keys are: Shift
, Control
, Alt
.
All keys are expected to be lowercase and shortened. E.g. Left Arrow
is left
, Page Down
is pagedown
, Control
is ctrl
, F1
is f1
, Escape
is esc
, etc.
Below is the EBNF Grammar of the keys
attribute.
modifier = "shift" | "ctrl" | "alt"; ascii = ? /[a-z0-9]/ ? ; fnkey = ? f1 through f12 ? ; arrow = "up" | "down" | "left" | "right" ; key = "tab" | "esc" | "space" | "*" | "pageup" | "pagedown" | "home" | "end" | arrow | ascii | fnkey; keycombo = { modifier, "+" }, key ; keys = keycombo, { " ", keycombo } ;
Given the following value for keys
:
ctrl+shift+f7 up pagedown esc space alt+m
The event is fired if any of the following key combinations are fired: Control
and Shift
and F7
keys, Up Arrow
key, Page Down
key, Escape
key, Space
key, Alt
and M
keys.
The following is an example of the set of keys that fulfills WAI-ARIA's “slider” role best practices:
<iron-a11y-keys target="[[target]]" keys="left pagedown down" on-keys-pressed="decrement"></iron-a11y-keys> <iron-a11y-keys target=""[[target]] keys="right pageup up" on-keys-pressed="increment"></iron-a11y-keys> <iron-a11y-keys target="[[target]]" keys="home" on-keys-pressed="setMin"></iron-a11y-keys> <iron-a11y-keys target=""[[target]] keys="end" on-keys-pressed="setMax"></iron-a11y-keys>
The target
properties must evaluate to a node. See the basic usage example above.
Each of the values for the on-keys-pressed
attributes must evalute to methods. The increment
method should move the slider a set amount toward the maximum value. decrement
should move the slider a set amount toward the minimum value. setMin
should move the slider to the minimum value. setMax
should move the slider to the maximum value.