In a web browser, an access key or accesskey allows a computer user to immediately jump to a specific web page via the keyboard.
Access in different browsers
Most browsers recognize access keys only when pressed in combination with one or more modifier keys such as Ctrl.
Web Browser | Modifier | Notes |
---|---|---|
Chrome | Alt on Windows, FreeBSD, and Linux
Ctrl + ⌥ Opt on Mac |
Alt+⇧ Shift is required instead of Alt in some circumstances. |
Firefox | Alt+⇧ Shift on Windows, FreeBSD and Linux
Ctrl+⌥ Opt on Mac |
|
Konqueror | Ctrl | The modifier key must be released before the regular key is pressed. |
Microsoft Edge | Alt | Alt+⇧ Shift is required in some circumstances. |
Opera | Alt on Windows, FreeBSD, and Linux
Ctrl + ⌥ Opt on Mac |
Alt+⇧ Shift is required instead of Alt in some circumstances. |
Safari | Ctrl+⌥ Opt on Mac and iOS
Alt on Windows |
Specifying access keys
Access keys are specified in HTML using the accesskey attribute. The value of an element’s accesskey attribute is the key the user will press (typically in combination with one or more other keys, as defined by the browser) in order to activate or focus that element. Though the accesskey attribute sets the key that can be pressed, it does not automatically notify the user of the bound access key. One convention is for the page author to show the access key value by using the <u> tag to underline the letter in the link’s text corresponding to the accesskey assigned. For the link below, a user would press Alt+H on Internet Explorer, Ctrl+H on a Mac (the command key can give undesired results) and ⇧ Shift+Esc+H on Opera to be directed to index.html.
<a href="index.html" accesskey="h">Home</a>
or to emphasize ‹H›:
<a href="index.html" accesskey="h"><em>H</em>ome</a>
alternatively, the following CSS can be used to indicate the character:
*:after {content:' '}
Emphasize <em> isn’t necessary, but can be useful to the user. It helps them identify which key to press to navigate to where they want to. Another possible way of displaying which accesskeys do what is to create a page with all the accesskeys displayed. Or the webmaster could do both. Another option for the end user is to install a user script such as FireFox Access Bar for GreaseMonkey.
History
Access keys were introduced to HTML in 1999 and quickly achieved near-universal browser support.
Conflict with browser and screen reader controls
Many browsers define their own keyboard shortcuts, which are used to control the browser itself: for instance, several browsers on Windows use Alt+D to focus the URL bar. Some initial implementations used the same modifier keys for access keys: for instance, accesskey="D" would also assign Alt+D, resulting in one or the other of the meanings being unavailable.
In the summer of 2002, a Canadian Web Accessibility consultancy did an informal survey to see if implementing accesskeys caused issues for users of adaptive technology, especially screen reading technology used by blind and low vision users. These users require numerous keyboard shortcuts to access web pages, as “pointing and clicking” a mouse is not an option for them. Their research showed that most key stroke combinations did in fact present a conflict for one or more of these technologies, and their final recommendation was to avoid using accesskeys altogether.
Subsequently, browsers changed their modifier keys to avoid the conflict, as can be seen in the table above: typically, Alt+⇧ Shift on Windows, and Ctrl + ⌥ Opt on Mac.
<access> element
In XHTML 2, a revised web authoring language, the HTML Working Group of the World Wide Web Consortium deprecated the accesskey attribute in favor of the <access> element defined in the XHTML Role Access Module. However, XHTML 2 has been retired in favor of HTML5, which (as of August 2009) continues to permit accesskey attributes, and does not define the <access> element type.
Use of standard access key mappings
In 2004, a standard emerged using numbers, which promotes consistency for users, and enables the increased predictability of keyboard shortcuts on different sites. These include, for example, 1 to go to the homepage, 0 for search, / for contact, and others..
Ten years later, in 2014, an updated and more comprehensive standard using both letters and numbers was released in order to breathe new life into browser access key standardization efforts.
See also
References
- Ui.key.contentAccess - MozillaZine Knowledge Base (retrieved 2011-01-07)
- "Accessibility features in Firefox - Make Firefox and web content work for all users | Firefox Help".
- "Using Accesskeys: is it worth it?". Archived from the original on February 4, 2012.
- "The accesskey attribute". World Wide Web Consortium. Retrieved 2012-02-06.
- "Home". standardaccesskeys.com.
External links
- A bug report for the MediaWiki software regarding conflicts with Accesskeys – includes lengthy discussion of various problems on different platforms
- A CSS stylesheet to make access keys on a website visible
- ACCESS + KEY = Accesskey (XHTML Role Access Module still flawed)
- Accesskeys and Reserved Keystroke Combinations
- Changes to Accesskeys in Firefox 2.0
- Ui.key.contentAccess – instructions on configuring access key behavior in Mozilla Firefox
- UK Government suggested numerical key standard
- User-defined Accesskeys using PHP Archived 2016-11-14 at the Wayback Machine
- Using Accesskeys is Easy
- SAK2014: Standard Access Keys 2014
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