aria-readonly
The aria-readonly
attribute indicates that the element is not editable, but is otherwise operable.
Description
When you want to indicate that an interactive element works but is not editable, set aria-readonly="true"
. This indicates to the user that an interactive element that would normally be focusable and copyable has been placed in a read-only (not disabled) state.
When aria-readonly
is set to true
, it means the user can read but not set the value of the widget. Read-only elements are still relevant to the user, so you should not prevent the user from navigating to the element or its focusable descendants or copying the value.
Examples include:
- Form elements which should not be changed.
- Row and column headers in a spreadsheet.
- The total value in a shopping cart.
If the non-changeable value shouldn't be able to receive focus, use aria-disabled
instead.
Note:
When using semantic HTML form controls, if you set the readonly
attribute, you don't need to include aria-readonly="true"
.
Note:
The value of <input type="checkbox">
can not be edited making readonly
not relevant. However, when creating checkboxes with role="checkbox"
the aria-readonly
attribute is supported.
Values
true
-
The element is readonly.
false
(default)-
The element is not readonly.
Associated interfaces
Element.ariaReadOnly
-
The
ariaReadOnly
property, part of theElement
interface, reflects the value of thearia-readonly
attribute. ElementInternals.ariaReadOnly
-
The
ariaReadOnly
property, part of theElementInternals
interface, reflects the value of thearia-readonly
attribute.
Associated roles
Used in roles:
Inherited into roles:
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA) # aria-readonly |