The Menu ARIA Plugin makes it easy to use the WAI-ARIA Roles and States with each of the controls in the Menu family. Using the Menu ARIA Plugin, menus created with the Menu widget are more interoperable with assistive technologies (AT), such as screen readers, making them more accessible to users with disabilities.
Watch a screen cast of this example running in Firefox 3 with the NVDA screen reader, to see immediately the benefits that ARIA provides, or download the latest development snapshot of NVDA to test this example for yourself.
Using the Menu ARIA Plugin is easy. Simply include the source file(s) for the ARIA plugin after the Menu source files as indicated on the Menu landing page. (Note: Since the Container Core file is a dependency of Menu, the Container ARIA Plugin is also a dependency of the Menu ARIA Plugin.)
All YUI ARIA Plugins require the user's browser and AT support the WAI-ARIA Roles and States.
Currently only Firefox 3 and
Internet Explorer
8 have support for ARIA, and are supported by several screen readers for
Windows that also offer support for ARIA. For this reason the YUI ARIA Plugins are only enabled
by default for these browsers. To enable the ARIA plugin for other browsers, simply the set
the usearia
configuration property to true
. For example:
labelledby
and describedby
configuration properties.
The Menu ARIA Plugin adds a labelledby
and describedby
configuration properties to the Menu class, each of which maps back to their respective ARIA
property of aria-labelledby
and
aria-describedby
. For example:
In keeping with the WAI-ARIA Best Practices for keyboard navigation the ARIA plugin for Menu enhances Menu's default behavior such that only one MenuItem is in the browser's tab index, enabling the user to easily tab into and out of the Menu. When a MenuItem in a Menu has focus, pressing the arrow keys moves focus between each MenuItem in the Menu.
The Menu ARIA Plugin enhances the ContextMenu widget such that any element defined as a ContextMenu
instance's trigger will have the
aria-haspopup
property automatically applied to let
users of AT know that the element has a context menu associated with it.
Two of the leading screen readers for Windows, JAWS and Window-Eyes, support ARIA. Free, trial versions of both are available for download, but require Windows be restarted every 40 minutes. The open-source NVDA Screen Reader is the best option for developers as it is both free and provides excellent support for ARIA.
You can load the necessary JavaScript and CSS for this example from Yahoo's servers. Click here to load the YUI Dependency Configurator with all of this example's dependencies preconfigured.
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