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Building a nice accessible web page is hard. Currently, Im trying to make a tooltip web accessible and I need help. Do you guys have any piece of advice for it? Like what aria attributes I should use. Or some other important thing you want to add!

Moreover, How do I prevent the screen reader from reading the tooltip, if it hasnt been shown? My approach here is to make it using javascript, adding and deleting aria-hidden attribute, but I want to avoid JS as much as possible.

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  • Did you look into role="tooltip" Jul 28, 2017 at 3:17
  • Can you add what exactly you want the tooltips to appear on? Can you post a code sample? (Is this just static HTML or a web application?)
    – Tsundoku
    Jul 28, 2017 at 18:42

2 Answers 2

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You'll have to show the tooltip on a focusable element (if this element is not focusable, you should set the tabindex attribute)

<input type="text" id="mytextbox" aria-describedby="mytooltip" />
<span id="mytooltip" role="tooltip" class="tooltip" aria-hidden="true">Tooltip for the textbox</span>

The aria-describedby will set the relationship between your focusable element and the tooltip. The tooltip role support is not very important, but you should use it as it's designed for this subject.

Once this is done, you just have to set the initial state in the CSS:

  .tooltip[aria-hidden='true'] {display: none}
  .tooltip[aria-hidden='false'] {display: block}

and define the aria-hidden attribute to true on focus or mouseover events using your favorite javascript code, and to false on blur and mouseout events.

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  • This could be done way simpler by using the hidden attribute.
    – Andy
    Jul 27, 2022 at 8:02
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The above example is working fine. we can achieve the same by using below jQuery code.

<script>
        $("#test").tooltip();
</script>
<a id="test" href="#" title="ThemeRoller: jQuery UI&apos;s theme builder application">ThemeRoller</a>

But another issue is the screen reader will not read the tooltip on mouseover.

By using jquery-ui version 1.12, the screen reader can read the tooltip on mouseover, but the problem is it can't identify the role and name of the tooltip container element. So is there any way to achieve that functionality?

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