| name | pixijs-accessibility |
| description | Use this skill when adding screen reader and keyboard navigation to PixiJS v8 apps. Covers AccessibilitySystem options (enabledByDefault, debug, activateOnTab, deactivateOnMouseMove), per-container accessibility properties, shadow DOM overlay, mobile touch-hook activation. Triggers on: accessibility, a11y, screen reader, ARIA, keyboard navigation, tab order, AccessibilitySystem, accessibleTitle, accessibleHint, tabIndex, accessibleChildren. |
| license | MIT |
Enable screen reader and keyboard navigation via PixiJS's AccessibilitySystem. The system creates an invisible shadow DOM overlay positioned over accessible containers so assistive technology can discover and activate them.
Quick Start
const button = new Sprite(await Assets.load("button.png"));
button.accessible = true;
button.accessibleTitle = "Play game";
button.accessibleHint = "Starts a new game session";
button.eventMode = "static";
button.tabIndex = 0;
app.stage.addChild(button);
app.renderer.accessibility.setAccessibilityEnabled(true);
button.on("pointertap", () => startGame());
Related skills: pixijs-events (pointer/tap handlers), pixijs-scene-dom-container (HTML elements on canvas), pixijs-application (init options).
Key points:
- By default the system activates only after the user presses Tab. Set
enabledByDefault: true in Application init for immediate activation.
- On mobile, the system creates a hidden touch hook; screen-reader focus activates accessibility for the whole session.
- The AccessibilitySystem requires the main thread; it is not available in a Web Worker.
Core Patterns
Container accessible properties
import { Container, Sprite } from "pixi.js";
const container = new Container();
container.accessible = true;
container.accessibleTitle = "Navigation menu";
container.accessibleHint = "Contains links to other pages";
container.eventMode = "static";
container.tabIndex = 0;
container.accessibleType = "div";
const sprite = new Sprite();
sprite.accessible = true;
sprite.accessibleTitle = "Close dialog";
sprite.accessibleText = "X";
sprite.eventMode = "static";
sprite.tabIndex = 1;
Available properties on any Container:
accessible (boolean) - enables the accessible overlay div
accessibleTitle (string) - sets the title attribute on the shadow div
accessibleHint (string) - sets the aria-label attribute
accessibleText (string) - sets inner text content of the shadow div
accessibleType (string) - HTML tag for the shadow element, defaults to 'button'
tabIndex (number) - tab order for keyboard navigation (only applied when interactive is true / eventMode is 'static' or 'dynamic')
accessibleChildren (boolean, default true) - when false, prevents child containers from being accessible
accessiblePointerEvents (string) - CSS pointer-events value on the shadow div
Custom tab order
Give each accessible container a tabIndex to control the order assistive tech walks through them. Higher numbers come later; equal numbers fall back to scene-graph order.
menuButton.accessible = true;
menuButton.eventMode = "static";
menuButton.tabIndex = 1;
playButton.accessible = true;
playButton.eventMode = "static";
playButton.tabIndex = 2;
settingsButton.accessible = true;
settingsButton.eventMode = "static";
settingsButton.tabIndex = 3;
tabIndex is only forwarded to the shadow div when the container is interactive (eventMode is 'static' or 'dynamic'). Without that, the system clamps the div's tabIndex back to 0, and the order you set is ignored.
Programmatic control
import { Application } from "pixi.js";
const app = new Application();
await app.init({ width: 800, height: 600 });
app.renderer.accessibility.setAccessibilityEnabled(true);
console.log(app.renderer.accessibility.isActive);
console.log(app.renderer.accessibility.isMobileAccessibility);
await app.init({
accessibilityOptions: {
enabledByDefault: true,
debug: true,
activateOnTab: true,
deactivateOnMouseMove: false,
},
});
The system can also be configured via static defaults before creating the Application:
import { AccessibilitySystem, Application } from "pixi.js";
AccessibilitySystem.defaultOptions.enabledByDefault = true;
AccessibilitySystem.defaultOptions.deactivateOnMouseMove = false;
const app = new Application();
await app.init();
Handling accessible interactions
import { Sprite } from "pixi.js";
const button = new Sprite();
button.eventMode = "static";
button.accessible = true;
button.accessibleTitle = "Submit form";
button.tabIndex = 0;
button.on("pointertap", () => {
submitForm();
});
When accessibility is active and a user activates a shadow div (via Enter/Space key or screen reader action), the system dispatches click, pointertap, and tap FederatedEvents to the corresponding container. Focus on the shadow div dispatches mouseover, and focus-out dispatches mouseout. Both eventMode and accessible should be set for full keyboard + pointer support.
Common Mistakes
[MEDIUM] Expecting accessibility to be active without Tab key press
The AccessibilitySystem does not create its DOM overlay until the user presses Tab (or, on mobile, focuses the touch hook). If your application needs accessibility immediately:
const app = new Application();
await app.init({
accessibilityOptions: {
enabledByDefault: true,
},
});
Or at runtime:
app.renderer.accessibility.setAccessibilityEnabled(true);
Without one of these, automated accessibility testing tools will not find the overlay elements.
[MEDIUM] Setting accessible without accessibleTitle
Wrong:
const sprite = new Sprite();
sprite.accessible = true;
Correct:
const sprite = new Sprite();
sprite.accessible = true;
sprite.accessibleTitle = "Play button";
sprite.accessibleHint = "Click to start the game";
A container with accessible = true but no accessibleTitle or accessibleHint gets a fallback title of "container {tabIndex}". Screen readers will announce this generic label with no useful context. Always provide at least accessibleTitle.
[MEDIUM] Accessibility deactivates when moving mouse
By default, deactivateOnMouseMove is true. Any mouse movement after Tab-activation will deactivate the overlay. This is by design (assumes keyboard-only users don't use a mouse), but it makes testing with a mouse frustrating.
await app.init({
accessibilityOptions: {
deactivateOnMouseMove: false,
},
});
[MEDIUM] Not importing accessibility extension in custom builds
When using skipExtensionImports: true for a custom build, the accessibility extension is not automatically registered. You must import it explicitly:
import "pixi.js/accessibility";
import { Application } from "pixi.js";
const app = new Application();
await app.init({ skipExtensionImports: true });
Without this import, app.renderer.accessibility will be undefined and no shadow DOM layer will be created.
API Reference