Accessibility
Both Android and iOS provide APIs for integrating apps with assistive technologies like the bundled screen readers VoiceOver (iOS) and TalkBack (Android). React Native has complementary APIs that let your app accommodate all users.
Android and iOS differ slightly in their approaches, and thus the React Native implementations may vary by platform.
Accessibility properties
accessible
When true
, indicates that the view is an accessibility element. When a view is an accessibility element, it groups its children into a single selectable component. By default, all touchable elements are accessible.
On Android, accessible={true}
property for a react-native View will be translated into native focusable={true}
.
<View accessible={true}>
<Text>text one</Text>
<Text>text two</Text>
</View>
In the above example, we can't get accessibility focus separately on 'text one' and 'text two'. Instead we get focus on a parent view with 'accessible' property.
accessibilityLabel
When a view is marked as accessible, it is a good practice to set an accessibilityLabel on the view, so that people who use VoiceOver know what element they have selected. VoiceOver will read this string when a user selects the associated element.
To use, set the accessibilityLabel
property to a custom string on your View, Text or Touchable:
<TouchableOpacity
accessible={true}
accessibilityLabel="Tap me!"
onPress={onPress}
>
<View style={styles.button}>
<Text style={styles.buttonText}>Press me!</Text>
</View>
</TouchableOpacity>
In the above example, the accessibilityLabel
on the TouchableOpacity element would default to "Press me!". The label is constructed by concatenating all Text node children separated by spaces.
accessibilityLabelledBy
Android
A reference to another element nativeID used to build complex forms.
The value of accessibilityLabelledBy
should match the nativeID
of the related element:
<View>
<Text nativeID="formLabel">Label for Input Field</Text>
<TextInput
accessibilityLabel="input"
accessibilityLabelledBy="formLabel"
/>
</View>
In the above example, the screenreader announces Input, Edit Box for Label for Input Field
when focusing on the TextInput.
accessibilityHint
An accessibility hint helps users understand what will happen when they perform an action on the accessibility element when that result is not clear from the accessibility label.
To use, set the accessibilityHint
property to a custom string on your View, Text or Touchable:
<TouchableOpacity
accessible={true}
accessibilityLabel="Go back"
accessibilityHint="Navigates to the previous screen"
onPress={onPress}
>
<View style={styles.button}>
<Text style={styles.buttonText}>Back</Text>
</View>
</TouchableOpacity>
In the above example, VoiceOver will read the hint after the label, if the user has hints enabled in the device's VoiceOver settings. Read more about guidelines for accessibilityHint
in the iOS Developer Docs
In the above example, TalkBack will read the hint after the label. At this time, hints cannot be turned off on Android.
accessibilityLanguage
iOS
By using the accessibilityLanguage
property, the screen reader will understand which language to use while reading the element's label, value and hint. The provided string value must follow the BCP 47 specification.
<View
accessible={true}
accessibilityLabel="Pizza"
accessibilityLanguage="it-IT"
>
<Text>🍕</Text>
</View>
accessibilityIgnoresInvertColors
iOS
Inverting screen colors is an Accessibility feature that makes the iPhone and iPad easier on the eyes for some people with a sensitivity to brightness, easier to distinguish for some people with color blindness, and easier to make out for some people with low vision. However, sometimes you have views such as photos that you don't want to be inverted. In this case, you can set this property to be true
so that these specific views won't have their colors inverted.
accessibilityLiveRegion
Android
When components dynamically change, we want TalkBack to alert the end user. This is made possible by the accessibilityLiveRegion
property. It can be set to none
, polite
and assertive
:
- none Accessibility services should not announce changes to this view.
- polite Accessibility services should announce changes to this view.
- assertive Accessibility services should interrupt ongoing speech to immediately announce changes to this view.
<TouchableWithoutFeedback onPress={addOne}>
<View style={styles.embedded}>
<Text>Click me</Text>
</View>
</TouchableWithoutFeedback>
<Text accessibilityLiveRegion="polite">
Clicked {count} times
</Text>
In the above example method addOne
changes the state variable count
. As soon as an end user clicks the TouchableWithoutFeedback, TalkBack reads text in the Text view because of its accessibilityLiveRegion="polite"
property.
accessibilityRole
accessibilityRole
communicates the purpose of a component to the user of an assistive technology.
accessibilityRole
can be one of the following:
- adjustable Used when an element can be "adjusted" (e.g. a slider).
- alert Used when an element contains important text to be presented to the user.
- button Used when the element should be treated as a button.
- checkbox Used when an element represents a checkbox which can be checked, unchecked, or have mixed checked state.
- combobox Used when an element represents a combo box, which allows the user to select among several choices.
- header Used when an element acts as a header for a content section (e.g. the title of a navigation bar).
- image Used when the element should be treated as an image. Can be combined with button or link, for example.
- imagebutton Used when the element should be treated as a button and is also an image.
- keyboardkey Used when the element acts as a keyboard key.
- link Used when the element should be treated as a link.
- menu Used when the component is a menu of choices.
- menubar Used when a component is a container of multiple menus.
- menuitem Used to represent an item within a menu.
- none Used when the element has no role.
- progressbar Used to represent a component which indicates progress of a task.
- radio Used to represent a radio button.
- radiogroup Used to represent a group of radio buttons.
- scrollbar Used to represent a scroll bar.
- search Used when the text field element should also be treated as a search field.
- spinbutton Used to represent a button which opens a list of choices.
- summary Used when an element can be used to provide a quick summary of current conditions in the app when the app first launches.
- switch Used to represent a switch which can be turned on and off.
- tab Used to represent a tab.
- tablist Used to represent a list of tabs.
- text Used when the element should be treated as static text that cannot change.
- timer Used to represent a timer.
- togglebutton Used to represent a toggle button. Should be used with accessibilityState checked to indicate if the button is toggled on or off.
- toolbar Used to represent a tool bar (a container of action buttons or components).
- grid Used with ScrollView, VirtualizedList, FlatList, or SectionList to represent a grid. Adds the in/out of grid announcements to the android GridView.
accessibilityState
Describes the current state of a component to the user of an assistive technology.
accessibilityState
is an object. It contains the following fields:
Name | Description | Type | Required |
---|---|---|---|
disabled | Indicates whether the element is disabled or not. | boolean | No |
selected | Indicates whether a selectable element is currently selected or not. | boolean | No |
checked | Indicates the state of a checkable element. This field can either take a boolean or the "mixed" string to represent mixed checkboxes. | boolean or 'mixed' | No |
busy | Indicates whether an element is currently busy or not. | boolean | No |
expanded | Indicates whether an expandable element is currently expanded or collapsed. | boolean | No |
To use, set the accessibilityState
to an object with a specific definition.
accessibilityValue
Represents the current value of a component. It can be a textual description of a component's value, or for range-based components, such as sliders and progress bars, it contains range information (minimum, current, and maximum).
accessibilityValue
is an object. It contains the following fields:
Name | Description | Type | Required |
---|---|---|---|
min | The minimum value of this component's range. | integer | Required if now is set. |
max | The maximum value of this component's range. | integer | Required if now is set. |
now | The current value of this component's range. | integer | No |
text | A textual description of this component's value. Will override min , now , and max if set. | string | No |
accessibilityViewIsModal
iOS
A Boolean value indicating whether VoiceOver should ignore the elements within views that are siblings of the receiver.
For example, in a window that contains sibling views A
and B
, setting accessibilityViewIsModal
to true
on view B
causes VoiceOver to ignore the elements in the view A
. On the other hand, if view B
contains a child view C
and you set accessibilityViewIsModal
to true
on view C
, VoiceOver does not ignore the elements in view A
.
accessibilityElementsHidden
iOS
A Boolean value indicating whether the accessibility elements contained within this accessibility element are hidden.
For example, in a window that contains sibling views A
and B
, setting accessibilityElementsHidden
to true
on view B
causes VoiceOver to ignore the elements in the view B
. This is similar to the Android property importantForAccessibility="no-hide-descendants"
.
aria-valuemax
Represents the maximum value for range-based components, such as sliders and progress bars.
aria-valuemin
Represents the minimum value for range-based components, such as sliders and progress bars.
aria-valuenow
Represents the current value for range-based components, such as sliders and progress bars.
aria-valuetext
Represents the textual description of the component.
aria-busy
Indicates an element is being modified and that assistive technologies may want to wait until the changes are complete before informing the user about the update.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean | false |
aria-checked
Indicates the state of a checkable element. This field can either take a boolean or the "mixed" string to represent mixed checkboxes.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean, 'mixed' | false |
aria-disabled
Indicates that the element is perceivable but disabled, so it is not editable or otherwise operable.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean | false |
aria-expanded
Indicates whether an expandable element is currently expanded or collapsed.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean | false |
aria-hidden
Indicates whether the accessibility elements contained within this accessibility element are hidden.
For example, in a window that contains sibling views A
and B
, setting aria-hidden
to true
on view B
causes VoiceOver to ignore the elements in the view B
.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean | false |
aria-label
Defines a string value that labels an interactive element.
Type |
---|
string |
aria-labelledby
Android
Identifies the element that labels the element it is applied to. The value of aria-labelledby
should match the nativeID
of the related element:
<View>
<Text nativeID="formLabel">Label for Input Field</Text>
<TextInput aria-label="input" aria-labelledby="formLabel" />
</View>
Type |
---|
string |
aria-live
Android
Indicates that an element will be updated, and describes the types of updates the user agents, assistive technologies, and user can expect from the live region.
- off Accessibility services should not announce changes to this view.
- polite Accessibility services should announce changes to this view.
- assertive Accessibility services should interrupt ongoing speech to immediately announce changes to this view.
Type | Default |
---|---|
enum('assertive' , 'off' , 'polite' ) | 'off' |
aria-modal
iOS
Boolean value indicating whether VoiceOver should ignore the elements within views that are siblings of the receiver.
Type | Default |
---|---|
boolean | false |
aria-selected
Indicates whether a selectable element is currently selected or not.
Type |
---|
boolean |
importantForAccessibility
Android
In the case of two overlapping UI components with the same parent, default accessibility focus can have unpredictable behavior. The importantForAccessibility
property will resolve this by controlling if a view fires accessibility events and if it is reported to accessibility services. It can be set to auto
, yes
, no
and no-hide-descendants
(the last value will force accessibility services to ignore the component and all of its children).
<View style={styles.container}>
<View
style={[styles.layout, {backgroundColor: 'green'}]}
importantForAccessibility="yes"
>
<Text>First layout</Text>
</View>
<View
style={[styles.layout, {backgroundColor: 'yellow'}]}
importantForAccessibility="no-hide-descendants"
>
<Text>Second layout</Text>
</View>
</View>
In the above example, the yellow
layout and its descendants are completely invisible to TalkBack and all other accessibility services. So we can use overlapping views with the same parent without confusing TalkBack.
onAccessibilityEscape
iOS
Assign this property to a custom function which will be called when someone performs the "escape" gesture, which is a two finger Z shaped gesture. An escape function should move back hierarchically in the user interface. This can mean moving up or back in a navigation hierarchy or dismissing a modal user interface. If the selected element does not have an onAccessibilityEscape
function, the system will attempt to traverse up the view hierarchy until it finds a view that does or bonk to indicate it was unable to find one.
onAccessibilityTap
Use this property to assign a custom function to be called when someone activates an accessible element by double tapping on it while it's selected.
onMagicTap
iOS
Assign this property to a custom function which will be called when someone performs the "magic tap" gesture, which is a double-tap with two fingers. A magic tap function should perform the most relevant action a user could take on a component. In the Phone app on iPhone, a magic tap answers a phone call, or ends the current one. If the selected element does not have an onMagicTap
function, the system will traverse up the view hierarchy until it finds a view that does.
role
role
communicates the purpose of a component to the user of an assistive technology. Has precedence over the accessibilityRole
prop.
role
can be one of the following:
- alert Used when an element contains important text to be presented to the user.
- button Used when the element should be treated as a button.
- checkbox Used when an element represents a checkbox which can be checked, unchecked, or have mixed checked state.
- combobox Used when an element represents a combo box, which allows the user to select among several choices.
- grid Used with ScrollView, VirtualizedList, FlatList, or SectionList to represent a grid. Adds the in/out of grid announcements to the android GridView.
- heading Used when an element acts as a header for a content section (e.g. the title of a navigation bar).
- img Used when the element should be treated as an image. Can be combined with button or link, for example.
- link Used when the element should be treated as a link.
- list Used to identify a list of items.
- menu Used when the component is a menu of choices.
- menubar Used when a component is a container of multiple menus.
- menuitem Used to represent an item within a menu.
- none Used when the element has no role.
- presentation Used when the element has no role.
- progressbar Used to represent a component which indicates progress of a task.
- radio Used to represent a radio button.
- radiogroup Used to represent a group of radio buttons.
- scrollbar Used to represent a scroll bar.
- searchbox Used when the text field element should also be treated as a search field.
- slider Used when an element can be "adjusted" (e.g. a slider).
- spinbutton Used to represent a button which opens a list of choices.
- summary Used when an element can be used to provide a quick summary of current conditions in the app when the app first launches.
- switch Used to represent a switch which can be turned on and off.
- tab Used to represent a tab.
- tablist Used to represent a list of tabs.
- timer Used to represent a timer.
- toolbar Used to represent a tool bar (a container of action buttons or components).
Accessibility Actions
Accessibility actions allow an assistive technology to programmatically invoke the actions of a component. In order to support accessibility actions, a component must do two things:
- Define the list of actions it supports via the
accessibilityActions
property. - Implement an
onAccessibilityAction
function to handle action requests.
The accessibilityActions
property should contain a list of action objects. Each action object should contain the following fields:
Name | Type | Required |
---|---|---|
name | string | Yes |
label | string | No |
Actions either represent standard actions, such as clicking a button or adjusting a slider, or custom actions specific to a given component such as deleting an email message. The name
field is required for both standard and custom actions, but label
is optional for standard actions.
When adding support for standard actions, name
must be one of the following:
'magicTap'
- iOS only - While VoiceOver focus is on or inside the component, the user double tapped with two fingers.'escape'
- iOS only - While VoiceOver focus is on or inside the component, the user performed a two finger scrub gesture (left, right, left).'activate'
- Activate the component. Typically this should perform the same action as when the user touches or clicks the component when not using an assistive technology. This is generated when a screen reader user double taps the component.'increment'
- Increment an adjustable component. On iOS, VoiceOver generates this action when the component has a role of'adjustable'
and the user places focus on it and swipes upward. On Android, TalkBack generates this action when the user places accessibility focus on the component and presses the volume up button.'decrement'
- Decrement an adjustable component. On iOS, VoiceOver generates this action when the component has a role of'adjustable'
and the user places focus on it and swipes downward. On Android, TalkBack generates this action when the user places accessibility focus on the component and presses the volume down button.'longpress'
- Android only - This action is generated when the user places accessibility focus on the component and double tap and holds one finger on the screen. Typically, this should perform the same action as when the user holds down one finger on the component while not using an assistive technology.
The label
field is optional for standard actions, and is often unused by assistive technologies. For custom actions, it is a localized string containing a description of the action to be presented to the user.
To handle action requests, a component must implement an onAccessibilityAction
function. The only argument to this function is an event containing the name of the action to perform. The below example from RNTester shows how to create a component which defines and handles several custom actions.
<View
accessible={true}
accessibilityActions={[
{name: 'cut', label: 'cut'},
{name: 'copy', label: 'copy'},
{name: 'paste', label: 'paste'},
]}
onAccessibilityAction={event => {
switch (event.nativeEvent.actionName) {
case 'cut':
Alert.alert('Alert', 'cut action success');
break;
case 'copy':
Alert.alert('Alert', 'copy action success');
break;
case 'paste':
Alert.alert('Alert', 'paste action success');
break;
}
}}
/>
Checking if a Screen Reader is Enabled
The AccessibilityInfo
API allows you to determine whether or not a screen reader is currently active. See the AccessibilityInfo documentation for details.
Sending Accessibility Events Android
Sometimes it is useful to trigger an accessibility event on a UI component (i.e. when a custom view appears on a screen or set accessibility focus to a view). Native UIManager module exposes a method ‘sendAccessibilityEvent’ for this purpose. It takes two arguments: view tag and a type of an event. The supported event types are typeWindowStateChanged
, typeViewFocused
and typeViewClicked
.
import {Platform, UIManager, findNodeHandle} from 'react-native';
if (Platform.OS === 'android') {
UIManager.sendAccessibilityEvent(
findNodeHandle(this),
UIManager.AccessibilityEventTypes.typeViewFocused,
);
}
Testing TalkBack Support Android
To enable TalkBack, go to the Settings app on your Android device or emulator. Tap Accessibility, then TalkBack. Toggle the "Use service" switch to enable or disable it.
Android emulators don't have TalkBack installed by default. You can install TalkBack on your emulator via the Google Play Store. Make sure to choose an emulator with the Google Play store installed. These are available in Android Studio.
You can use the volume key shortcut to toggle TalkBack. To turn on the volume key shortcut, go to the Settings app, then Accessibility. At the top, turn on Volume key shortcut.
To use the volume key shortcut, press both volume keys for 3 seconds to start an accessibility tool.
Additionally, if you prefer, you can toggle TalkBack via command line with:
# disable
adb shell settings put secure enabled_accessibility_services com.android.talkback/com.google.android.marvin.talkback.TalkBackService
# enable
adb shell settings put secure enabled_accessibility_services com.google.android.marvin.talkback/com.google.android.marvin.talkback.TalkBackService
Testing VoiceOver Support iOS
To enable VoiceOver, go to the Settings app on your iOS device (it's not available for simulator). Tap General, then Accessibility. There you will find many tools that people use to make their devices more usable, such as bolder text, increased contrast, and VoiceOver.
To enable VoiceOver, tap on VoiceOver under "Vision" and toggle the switch that appears at the top.
At the very bottom of the Accessibility settings, there is an "Accessibility Shortcut". You can use this to toggle VoiceOver by triple clicking the Home button.