Utility classes that change how users interact with contents of a website.
Change the way in which the content is selected when the user interacts with it.
This paragraph will be entirely selected when clicked by the user.
This paragraph has default select behavior.
This paragraph will not be selectable when clicked by the user.
<p class="user-select-all">This paragraph will be entirely selected when clicked by the user.</p>
<p class="user-select-auto">This paragraph has default select behavior.</p>
<p class="user-select-none">This paragraph will not be selectable when clicked by the user.</p>
Material Style provides .pe-none
and .pe-auto
classes to prevent or add element interactions.
This link can not be clicked.
This link can be clicked (this is default behavior).
This link can not be clicked because the pointer-events
property is inherited from its parent. However, this link has a pe-auto
class and can be clicked.
<p><a href="#" class="pe-none" tabindex="-1" aria-disabled="true">This link</a> can not be clicked.</p>
<p><a href="#" class="pe-auto">This link</a> can be clicked (this is default behavior).</p>
<p class="pe-none"><a href="#" tabindex="-1" aria-disabled="true">This link</a> can not be clicked because the <code>pointer-events</code> property is inherited from its parent. However, <a href="#" class="pe-auto">this link</a> has a <code>pe-auto</code> class and can be clicked.</p>
The .pe-none
class (and the pointer-events
CSS property it sets) only prevents interactions with a
pointer (mouse, stylus, touch). Links and controls with .pe-none
are, by default, still focusable and
actionable for keyboard users. To ensure that they are completely neutralized even for keyboard users, you may
need to add further attributes such as tabindex="-1"
(to prevent them from receiving keyboard focus) and
aria-disabled="true"
(to convey the fact they are effectively disabled to assistive technologies), and possibly
use JavaScript to completely prevent them from being actionable.
If possible, the simpler solution is: