Display elements in a subtree that match filter input text.
$ npm install @github/filter-input-element
<filter-input aria-owns="robots">
<label>
Filter robots
<input type="text" autofocus autocomplete="off">
</label>
</filter-input>
<div id="robots">
<ul data-filter-list>
<li>Bender</li>
<li>Hubot</li>
<li>Wall-E</li>
<li>BB-8</li>
<li>R2-D2</li>
</ul>
<p data-filter-empty-state hidden>0 robots found.</p>
</div>
filter-input[aria-owns]
should point to the container ID that wraps all<filter-input>
related elements.filter-input
should have oneinput
child element that is used to filter.[id]
should be set on a container that either contains or has[data-filter-list]
attribute.[data-filter-list]
should be set on the element whose direct child elements are to be filtered.
Use [data-filter-item-text]
to specify an element whose text should be used for filtering. In the following example, the text (current)
would not be matched.
<div data-filter-list>
<a href="/bender">Bender</a>
<a href="/hubot">
<span data-filter-item-text>Hubot</span>
(current)
</a>
</div>
Use [data-filter-empty-state]
to specify an element to be displayed when no results were found. This element must be inside of the container aria-owns
points to.
<div id="filter-list">
<div data-filter-list>
<a href="/bender">Bender</a>
<a href="/hubot">Hubot</a>
</div>
<div data-filter-empty-state hidden>No results found.</div>
</div>
Use [data-filter-new-item]
to include an item to create a new instance when no exact match were found. The element with [data-filter-new-text]
's text content will be set to the input value. You can also use [data-filter-new-value]
to set an input value to the query param.
<div id="filter-list">
<div data-filter-list>
<a href="/bender">Bender</a>
<a href="/hubot">Hubot</a>
</div>
<form action="/new" data-filter-new-item hidden>
<button name="robot" data-filter-new-item-value>
Create robot "<span data-filter-new-item-text></span>"
</button>
</form>
</div>
filterInputElement.filter
can be optionally set to provide an alternative filtering logic. The default is substring.
const fuzzyFilterInput = document.querySelector('.js-fuzzy-filter-input')
fuzzyFilterInput.filter = (element, elementText, query) => {
// fuzzy filtering logic
return {match: boolean, hideNew: boolean}
}
match
(required) indicates whether the item should be shown. hideNew
(optional) will determine whether the "Create new item" element should be hidden. For example, when an exact match is found, the "create new item" option should be hidden.
filter-input-start
(bubbles) - fired on<filter-input>
when a filter action is about to start.filter-input-updated
(bubbles) - fired on<filter-input>
when filter has finished.event.detail.count
is the number of matches found, andevent.detail.total
is the total number of elements.
To ensure that the client side update is communicated to assistive technologies, filter-input-updated
event can be used to update filter results to screen readers. For example:
const ariaLiveContainer = document.querySelector('[aria-live="assertive"]')
document.addEventListener('filter-input-updated', event => {
ariaLiveContainer.textContent = `${event.detail.count} results found.`
})
For more details on this technique, check out Improving accessibility on GOV.UK search.
Browsers without native custom element support require a polyfill.
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- Microsoft Edge
npm install
npm test
Distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.