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ionic-framework/core
Maria Hutt cb6007363a fix(overlay): hide from screen readers while animating (#29951)
Issue number: resolves #29857 

---------

<!-- Please do not submit updates to dependencies unless it fixes an
issue. -->

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etc). Submit multiple pull requests if needed. -->

## What is the current behavior?
<!-- Please describe the current behavior that you are modifying. -->

Screen readers like Android Talkback would not have the focus ring on
the correct element. For example, Talkback would announce the buttons
correctly within action sheet but the focus ring was no where to be
seen.

After digging around, the focus rings are located out of screen because
the action sheet is mounted to the DOM out of the screen first then
transitions into the screen. There are some screen readers that do not
behave as expected when an element uses `transform` styles like action
sheet.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5a700bcc-3149-47a9-96ff-0aef99dd2bb3

## What is the new behavior?
<!-- Please describe the behavior or changes that are being added by
this PR. -->

- When an overlay is being animated (presenting or dismissing), the
overlay will hide from screen readers. This allows the element to
navigate to its correct destination for screen readers to interact with.
Plus, we shouldn't allow screen readers to interact with content in the
middle of an animation. It could lead to some confusion.

## Does this introduce a breaking change?

- [ ] Yes
- [x] No

<!--
  If this introduces a breaking change:
1. Describe the impact and migration path for existing applications
below.
  2. Update the BREAKING.md file with the breaking change.
3. Add "BREAKING CHANGE: [...]" to the commit description when merging.
See
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for more information.
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## Other information

<!-- Any other information that is important to this PR such as
screenshots of how the component looks before and after the change. -->

Dev build: 8.3.3-dev.11729276019.194c165c

**A physical Android device will be needed, the issue does not appear in
simulators**

Components that need to be tested because they use overlays:
- Action sheet
- Alert
- Loading
- Modal
- Popover
- Select w/ action sheet interface
- Select w/ alert interface
- Select w/ popover interface
- Toast

How to test:
1. Create a starter app (any framework will do)
2. Add an action sheet
3. Build app for mobile devices
```
ionic build

ionic cap add ios
ionic cap add android

ionic cap copy && ionic cap sync
```
4. Open the app in Android Studio: `ionic cap open android`
5. Connect the Android device to Android Studio
6. Open app in Android device
7. Launch Talkback
8. Navigate back to the app
9. Open action sheet 
10. Swipe over to the action sheet's buttons
11. Notice that the buttons don't have a focus ring
12. Go back to the starter
4. Install the dev build
5. Add the components to the app
6. Sync app: `ionic cap copy && ionic cap sync`
13. Relaunch the app on the Android device
14. Verify that the focus ring appears on the action sheet's buttons
15. Verify that the other overlays are working as intended
2024-10-24 15:34:46 +00:00
..
2024-10-16 18:55:50 +00:00
2024-10-16 18:55:50 +00:00

@ionic/core

Ionic is an open source App Development Framework that makes it easy to build top quality Native and Progressive Web Apps with web technologies.

The Ionic Core package contains the Web Components that make up the reusable UI building blocks of Ionic Framework. These components are designed to be used in traditional frontend view libraries/frameworks (such as Stencil, React, Angular, or Vue), or on their own through traditional JavaScript in the browser.

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Custom Elements Build

In addition to the default, self lazy-loading components built by Stencil, this package also comes with each component exported as a stand-alone custom element within @ionic/core/components. Each component extends HTMLElement, and does not lazy-load itself. Instead, this package is useful for projects already using a bundler such as Webpack or Rollup. While all components are available to be imported, the custom elements build also ensures bundlers only import what's used, and tree-shakes any unused components.

Below is an example of importing ion-badge, and initializing Ionic so it is able to correctly load the "mode", such as Material Design or iOS. Additionally, the initialize({...}) function can receive the Ionic config.

import { defineCustomElement } from "@ionic/core/components/ion-badge.js";
import { initialize } from "@ionic/core/components";

// Initializes the Ionic config and `mode` behavior
initialize();

//  Defines the `ion-badge` web component
defineCustomElement();

Notice how we import from @ionic/core/components as opposed to @ionic/core. This helps bundlers pull in only the code that is needed.

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For example, if you wanted to use ion-modal, you would do the following:

import { defineCustomElement } from "@ionic/core/components/ion-modal.js";
import { initialize } from "@ionic/core/components";

// Initializes the Ionic config and `mode` behavior
initialize();

//  Defines the `ion-modal` and child `ion-backdrop` web components.
defineCustomElement();

The defineCustomElement function will define ion-modal, but it will also define ion-backdrop, which is a component that ion-modal uses internally.

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When using an overlay controller, developers will need to define the overlay component before it can be used. Below is an example of using modalController:

import { defineCustomElement } from '@ionic/core/components/ion-modal.js';
import { initialize, modalController } from '@ionic/core/components';

initialize();
defineCustomElement();

const showModal = async () => {
  const modal = await modalController.create({ ... });
  
  ...
}

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