An age old problem of the web platform when it comes to accessibility has been to confuse links and buttons. A link (<a>) leads to somewhere. A button (<button>) performs an action. It’s important to respect that convention.

Now, in single page applications, things are bit more blurry because we no longer follow links which cause a page to reload entirely. Links, while still changing the URL, tend to replace the part of the page that changed. Sometimes, they might be replaced entirely by an inline action.

At N26, we have a pretty unique challenge: we support almost all of our features with and without JavaScript (thanks to server-side rendering). This implies that a lot of links should become buttons when JavaScript is enabled and running. To avoid authoring ternaries all over the place, we have a single component capable of rendering both links and buttons depending on the given props. We call it Action.

What component to render

Our line of reasoning to determine what to render is as follow: if we have an href prop, we should render a link (<a> element), otherwise we should render a button. It would look like this:

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.href ? 'a' : 'button'

return <Component {...props} />
}

If like us, you use client-side routing such as react-router, you might also want to render a Link component to render router links when the to prop is provided.

import { Link } from 'react-router-dom'

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.to ? Link : props.href ? 'a' : 'button'

return <Component {...props} />
}

Then, we can have a link changing into a <button> when JavaScript eventually kicks in:

const MyComponent = props => {
const [isMounted, setIsMounted] = React.useState(false)

React.useEffect(() => setIsMounted(true), [])

return (
<Action
href={isMounted ? undefined : '/about'}
onClick={isMounted ? props.displayAboutDialog : undefined}
>

Learn more about us
</Action>
)
}

Open a tab for me, will you?

The technique G201 of the WCAG asks that each link opens in a new tab has:

  • a warning spoken in assistive technology that this link opens to a new tab,
  • a visual warning in text that this link opens to a new window.

To achieve that, we can render a small icon with an associated label stating “(opens in a new tab)”. The resulting markup would look like this:

<a href="/about" target="_blank" class="link">
Learn more about us
<svg aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" xmlns="https://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 32 32" ><path d="M22 11L10.5 22.5M10.44 11H22v11.56" fill="none"></path></svg>
<span class="sr-only">(opens in new tab)</span>
</a>

For the sake of simplicity, let’s assume we have an Icon component that rends a SVG, and a VisuallyHidden component that renders hidden accessible text.

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.to ? Link : props.href ? 'a' : 'button'

return (
<Component {...props}>
{props.children}
{props.target === '_blank' && (
<>
<Icon icon='new-tab' />
<VisuallyHidden>(opens in a new tab)</VisuallyHidden>
</>
)}
</Component>
)
}

We can also extract this logic into its own little component to make the JSX of our Action component a little easier to read:

const NewTabIcon = props => (
<>
<Icon icon='new-tab' />
<VisuallyHidden>(opens in a new tab)</VisuallyHidden>
</>
)

No opener, no referrer

When following a link using target='_blank', the other page can access the window object of the original page through the window.opener property. This exposes an attack surface because the other page can potentially redirect to a malicious URL.

The solution to this problem has been around for pretty much ever and is to add rel='noopener' or rel='noreferrer' (or both) to the links opening in a new tab so the window.opener object is not accessible.

To make sure never to forget these attributes, we can bake this logic in our Action component.

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.to ? Link : props.href ? 'a' : 'button'
const rel = props.target === '_blank'
? 'noopener noreferrer'
: undefined

return (
<Component {...props} rel={rel}>
{props.children}
{props.target === '_blank' && <NewTabIcon />}
</Component>
)
}

If we want to be able to pass a custom rel attribute as well, we can extract this logic in a small function:

const getRel = props => {
if (props.target === '_blank') {
return (props.rel || '') + ' noopener noreferrer'
}

return props.rel
}

Is this your type?

The default value for the type attribute on a <button> element is submit. This decision comes from a time where buttons were almost exclusively used in forms. And while this is no longer the case, the default value remains. Therefore, it is recommended to always specify a type to all <button> elements: submit if their purpose is to submit their parent form, button otherwise.

As this can be a little cumbersome, we can bake that logic in our component once again:

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.to ? Link : props.href ? 'a' : 'button'
const rel = getRel(props)
const type = Component === 'button' ? props.type || 'button' : undefined

return (
<Component {...props} rel={rel} type={type}>
{props.children}
{props.target === '_blank' && <NewTabIcon />}
</Component>
)
}

One component, many outfits

One of the reasons why people tend to use links when they should use a button, or buttons when they should use a link is because they think in terms of styles, rather than semantics.

If the design in place instructs to render a link to another page as a button, an uninformed (or sloppy) developer might decide to use a button, and then use some JavaScript magic voodoo to redirect to the new page.

By making our component themable, we can provide a styling API without injuring the underlying semantics. For our example, we’ll consider two HTML classes, button and link, styling like a button and like a link respectively.

const Action = props => {
const Component = props.to ? Link : props.href ? 'a' : 'button'
const rel = getRel(props)
const type = Component === 'button' ? props.type || 'button' : undefined
const className = [
props.className,
props.theme === 'LINK' ? 'link' : 'button'
]
.filter(Boolean)
.join(' ')

return (
<Component {...props} rel={rel} type={type} className={className}>
{props.children}
{props.target === '_blank' && <NewTabIcon />}
</Component>
)
}

Then we can render a button, styled as a link:

const MyComponent = props => (
<Action theme='LINK' type='button' onClick={toggle}>Toggle</Action>
)

Or a link, styled as a button:

const MyComponent = props => (
<Action theme='BUTTON' href='/about'>Learn more about us</Action>
)

Note how we preserve any provided className so it becomes possible to give our component a class name on top of the one used by the component itself for styling.

const MyComponent = props => (
<Action theme='BUTTON' href='/about' className='about-link'>
Learn more about us
</Action>
)

Wrapping up

Our Action component holds even more logic (especially around webviews), but that is no longer relevant for our article. I guess the point is that anything that is important for accessibility or security reasons should be abstracted in a React component. This way, it no longer becomes the responsibility of the developer to remember it.