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Displays a brief message without interrupting a user’s task.

Alerts display brief and important messages that capture the user’s attention but don’t interrupt their workflow.

Usage

When to use

  • To display a concise, important message that requires the user’s attention.

When not to use

  • To communicate successful feedback on a user’s action, consider Toast.
  • As a dialog to confirm an action, consider Modal.
  • To flag new features (e.g., "In Preview", "Beta", "New", etc), consider Badge.

Types of alerts

There are three types of alerts: page, inline, and compact.

Page

Use page-level alerts on the top of the page, between the navigation and the breadcrumb to inform users of an event that may require the user’s attention or action.

Inline

Use inline alerts when the message is contextual or specific to the section it’s placed in.

Compact

Use compact alerts when a less prominent alert is needed.

Ordering Alerts by type

Alert types have an implied hierarchy and should be ordered starting from page and descending in hierarchy to compact.

Ordering alerts of different types

Color

Use color logically.

  • Neutral to provide general information to the user regarding the current context or relevant actions.
  • Highlight to provide general or promotional information to the user prominently.
  • Success to indicate a successful action.
  • Use the success variant sparingly. To communicate success after a user action is performed, use Toast.
  • Warning to help users avoid an issue. Provide guidance and actions, if possible.
  • Critical to indicate critical errors that need immediate action.

Critical alerts

Use critical alerts to convey crucial information or errors, such as validation errors that require user attention or action.

Do

Use the Alert for more intrusive message communication about errors or critical disruptions at an application, page, or section level where users need to take immediate action.

Do

Use the Alert to communicate validation errors. For more details, refer to the form validation patterns.

Don’t

Don't use alerts to provide non-intrusive feedback to users about the failure of an ongoing task or request. For example, a failure while deleting a cluster. Use the Toast instead.

Don’t

Don't use alerts to communicate error messages that are not caused by the user. For example, an unsuccessful Vault cluster creation due to a failure while validating the deployment. Use the Toast instead.

Ordering Alerts by color

Order multiple Alerts by their importance and impact on the user, starting from critical, to communicate an Alert that must be resolved immediately, and descending in order of perceived impact to neutral.

Ordering alerts

Placing Alerts

Inline and compact Alerts can have more meaning if they are placed within the element that is responsible for the Alert. This can help when it’s necessary to have more than one Alert on the page and is relevant for pages that aggregate content like dashboards, or where a specific localized message is necessary.

Example of multiple Alerts placed to different parts of the UI

Placement by type

Where an Alert is placed is dependent on the type.

Page

Page alerts are placed between the global header navigation and the breadcrumb, next to the left navigation.

Placement of page alert

Inline

Inline alerts can be added to a section or component or inline with content.

Placement of inline alert

Compact

Compact alerts can be added to a section or component or inline with content.

Placement of compact Alert

Mixing Alert types

We recommend against mixing different types of Alerts in the same context, as this can unintentionally convey that different Alert types have the same hierarchical impact.

Don’t

Don’t mix different Alert types in the same context.

Example of different Alert types in the same context

Do

Instead, be more specific with how the Alerts are placed depending on what the message applies to.

Example of different Alert type placements

Ordering Alerts by color

Order multiple Alerts by their importance and impact on the user, starting from critical, to communicate an Alert that must be resolved immediately, and descending in order of perceived impact to neutral.

Ordering alerts

Placing Alerts

Inline and compact Alerts can have more meaning if they are placed within the element that is responsible for the Alert. This can help when it’s necessary to have more than one Alert on the page and is relevant for pages that aggregate content like dashboards, or where a specific localized message is necessary.

Example of multiple Alerts placed to different parts of the UI

Placement by type

Where an Alert is placed is dependent on the type.

Page

Page alerts are placed between the global header navigation and the breadcrumb, next to the left navigation.

Placement of page alert

Inline

Inline alerts can be added to a section or component or inline with content.

Placement of inline alert

Compact

Compact alerts can be added to a section or component or inline with content.

Placement of compact Alert

Mixing Alert types

We recommend against mixing different types of Alerts in the same context, as this can unintentionally convey that different Alert types have the same hierarchical impact.

Don’t

Don’t mix different Alert types in the same context.

Example of different Alert types in the same context

Do

Instead, be more specific with how the Alerts are placed depending on what the message applies to.

Example of different Alert type placements

Icons

All alerts have icons by default that are intentionally tied to the alert type.

Icons within the neutral and highlight alerts can be replaced with other icons. Change them only when the new icon provides the user with extra value; otherwise, use the default icon provided.

Dismissal

Persistent

All alerts are persistent by default, while compact alerts are always persistent.

Dismissible

Page and inline alerts can be dismissible.

We recommend setting neutral and highlight alerts to be dismissible, as they are not critical for users to complete their journey.

Do

We recommend keeping critical alerts non-dismissible as they are essential to the user’s journey and can get dismissed by mistake.

Do
Don’t

Multiple alerts

In general, displaying multiple alerts on the same page is discouraged as it can negatively impact the page hierarchy and unnecessarily shift emphasis away from the main content on the page.

However, depending on the logic within the application and the type of content being expressed to the user, displaying more than one Alert on a page may be necessary.

Alerts of the same color

While it might not always be possible depending on the type of content and intended action, try to refrain from displaying more than one of the same color Alert on the same page. This adds unnecessary visual weight to the page and may result in the user being confused about which Alert is more important or which might require attention first.

Example of multiple Alerts of the same color

To avoid this, try combining relevant or overlapping content into a single Alert with a more concise narrative, or by translating the related messages into a list.

Example of multiple Alerts combined into one

Multiple Alert messages combined in a bulleted list

Alerts of the same type

While not recommended for page type Alerts, it may be necessary to have more than one inline or compact Alert on a page. If this is the case, ensure that the Alerts are ordered by impact and placed in areas where they provide the most relevance.

Alerts within a Reveal

As a last resort, when multiple Alerts of the same type are necessary, display the Alerts that require immediate attention or have the most impact to the user within the page while obfuscating additional Alerts within a Reveal. We recommend against hiding critical and warning Alerts in this manner as they generally must be addressed quickly to avoid a negative outcome.

This method should be rare and infrequent, and should only be used if the number of Alerts of the same type exceeds two. Instead, effort should be put into placing Alerts that matter most to the user and in ways that make them easy to resolve.

This pattern is somewhat experimental, if you find a use case for it we recommend performing a usability test and collecting user feedback as a means to validate the pattern. The HDS team would love to discuss your findings through our normal support channels.

Multiple alerts when a Reveal is closed

Multiple alerts when a Reveal is open

How to use this component

The most basic invocation requires the type argument to be passed, along with the title and/or description content. By default, a neutral Alert is generated.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Type

A different type of Alert can be invoked using the type argument.

<Hds::Alert @type="page" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>
<Hds::Alert @type="compact" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Title and description

Optionally, you can pass only title or only description.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
</Hds::Alert>
<Hds::Alert @type="inline" as |A|>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Tag

The @tag argument changes the HTML element that wraps the title content of [A].Title. When organizing the content on a webpage, the heading levels should reflect the structure of the page. For example, if an Alert appears directly below the main heading of the page, it should be "h2".

Edit credit card

<div class="doc-alert-demo-heading">
 <Hds::Text::Display @tag="h1" @size="500">Edit credit card</Hds::Text::Display>
</div>
<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="critical" as |A|>
  <A.Title @tag="h2">Form submission error</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Correct the formatting of the following fields to update your user profile:</A.Description>
  <A.Description>
    <Hds::Link::Inline @href="#" @color="secondary">Expiration date</Hds::Link::Inline>
  </A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

The default @tag is "div" because the correct value is dependent on the individual page. We strongly encourage consumers to update the @tag to meet WCAG Success Criterion 1.3.1 Info and Relationships as the visual experience should match what is presented to the user with assistive technology.

Color

A different color can be applied to the Alert using the color argument. This will determine the default icon used in the Alert, unless overwritten.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="success" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Icons

A different icon can be used in the Alert using the icon argument. This accepts any icon name.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="success" @icon="bulb" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

If you need to hide the icon, pass false to the icon argument. This is only an option on page and inline Alerts as compact Alerts require an icon.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="success" @icon={{false}} as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Dismissal

To enable dismissibility, pass a callback function to the onDismiss argument. This will add a dismiss button to the Alert. When that button is clicked, the callback function will be executed.

Given the variety of use cases and contexts in which alerts are used across products, application teams will need to implement the callback function.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="warning" @onDismiss={{this.noop}} as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Actions

Actions can be passed to the component using one of the suggested Button or LinkStandalone contextual components.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
  <A.Button @text="Your action" @color="secondary" {{on "click" this.yourOnClickFunction}} />
  <A.LinkStandalone @color="secondary" @icon="arrow-right" @iconPosition="trailing" @text="Another action" @href="#" />
</Hds::Alert>

Structured content

When needed, the Description contextual component can contain logic, rich HTML, or structured content.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="success" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>
    The description can contain
    {{#if true}}conditional logic{{/if}}, Ember components, and HTML tags, like
    <strong>strong text</strong>,
    <em>emphasized text</em>,
    <code>code</code>,
    <pre>pre</pre>,
    <Hds::Link::Inline @color="secondary" @href="#">inline</Hds::Link::Inline>
    <LinkTo @route="index">links</LinkTo>.
  </A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

You can pass more than one D.Description contextual component to have multiple description lines.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" @color="success" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>First line of description.</A.Description>
  <A.Description>Second line of description.</A.Description>
</Hds::Alert>

Generic content

Use the Generic contextual component to insert custom content. Generic content will appear after the title, description, and actions. Application teams will need to implement spacing, layout, and styling for generic content.

Use this method with caution and as an escape hatch. Contact the Design Systems Team to check that the solution is conformant and satisfies accessibility criteria.

<Hds::Alert @type="inline" as |A|>
  <A.Title>Title here</A.Title>
  <A.Description>Description here</A.Description>
  <A.Generic>
    [your content here]
  </A.Generic>
</Hds::Alert>

Component API

Alert

<[A].Title> yielded component
Alert::Title yielded as contextual component (see below).
<[A].Description> yielded component
Alert::Description yielded as contextual component (see below).
<[A].Button> yielded component
Button yielded as contextual component (see below).
<[A].LinkStandalone> yielded component
Link::Standalone yielded as contextual component (see below).
<[A].Generic> yielded component
A generic container yielded as contextual component (see below).
type enum
Required
  • page
  • inline
  • compact
Sets the type of alert.
color enum
  • neutral (default)
  • highlight
  • success
  • warning
  • critical
Sets the color scheme for background, border, title, and description, which cannot be overridden.

color results in a default icon, which can be overridden.
icon string | false
Override the default icon name, which is determined by the color argument.

accepts any icon name, or false, for no icon.
onDismiss function
The alert can be dismissed by the user. When a function is passed, the "dismiss" button is displayed.
…attributes
This component supports use of ...attributes.

Contextual components

[A].Title

The Alert::Title component, yielded as contextual component.

yield
Elements passed as children are yielded as inner content of the "title" block.
tag enum
  • div (default)
  • h1
  • h2
  • h3
  • h4
  • h5
  • h6
The HTML tag that wraps the content of the "title" block.
…attributes
This component supports use of ...attributes.

[A].Description

The Alert::Description component, yielded as contextual component.

yield
Elements passed as children are yielded as inner content of the "description" block.
Accepts complex content, such as logic/conditionals, HTML elements, other Ember components, etc.
Text content inherits its style. Predefined styling is applied for simple HTML elements, such as strong, em, a, code/pre, while consumers will need to style other HTML tags if used as children.
…attributes
This component supports use of ...attributes.

[A].Button

The Button component, yielded as contextual component inside the "actions" block of the Alert.

It exposes the same API as the Button component, apart from the @size argument, which is pre-defined to be small, and the @color argument that accepts only secondary or tertiary.

[A].LinkStandalone

The Link::Standalone component, yielded as contextual component inside the "actions" block of the Alert.

It exposes the same API as the Link::Standalone component, apart from the @size argument, which is pre-defined to be

[A].Generic

A generic container, yielded as contextual component.

yield
Elements passed as children are yielded after all the other elements.
The content is unstyled by default, so consumers will need to take care of layout and style of the content.

General recommendations

  • Keep the title short, as this will be the most prominent element when users scan the Alert.
  • Avoid ending the title with a period.
  • Alert descriptions should be short but clear enough to explain what’s happening. We recommend keeping messages under 90 characters.
  • For warning and critical alerts, guide the users on how to prevent or fix the issue.

Actions

Use small buttons to avoid competing with other actions on the page. Use more than two actions sparingly.

We recommend using the secondary button variant for primary actions and the tertiary button variant for secondary actions.

For content guidelines on actions, refer to Button and Link documentation.

Usage of critical buttons

Avoid using critical buttons in alerts. We handle the prominence and importance via the styling of the alert container itself. If you need to confirm that the user intended to interact with the action, consider displaying a confirmation modal.

Don’t

Within page and inline Alerts

When linking to internal and external resources in the Alert, default to using a secondary Standalone Link in the actions area. In the Ember component, these elements are passed as contextual components.

Within the Alert description, use the secondary Inline Link as the default link color. A common use case for this is when linking to multiple resources.

Wrap links to multiple related items on the same page in a list, e.g., when highlighting multiple form validation errors.

Within compact Alerts

As compact Alerts don’t support a title or actions, use secondary Inline Links in the description of the component. This matches the intended hierarchy of the component relative to other Alert types and supports linking to multiple resources.

If there is only one link within the compact alert, it’s acceptable to use the primary color, but this will result in increased prominence and elevated hierarchy.

Don’t

Don’t mix and match different link colors in the same compact Alert.

Don’t

Don’t use a Standalone Link in the description of a compact Alert. The description area is intended for inline content, while the Standalone Link is a block-level element.

Standalone Link inside of compact Alert

Composition

Page and inline alerts can be configured in a variety of ways. For example:

With icon and title

With icon, title, and description

Title and description only

The title or description should contain the alert type, e.g., “Warning,” if no icon is present.

With actions

With generic content

Anatomy

Page and inline alerts

Anatomy of the page alert

Anatomy of the inline alert

Element Usage
Icon Optional, but recommended
Title Required, if no description; optional, otherwise
Description Required, if no title; optional, otherwise
Actions Optional
Dismiss button Optional
Content Required
Container Required

Compact alerts

Anatomy of the compact alert

Element Usage
Icon Required
Description Required

Conformance rating

Conditionally conformant

Alerts are conformant when there are no interactive elements present inside of the alert. There is future work planned to make this component WCAG conformant by adding support for the correct ARIA roles when interactive elements are contained within the alert.

Best practices

Notification

An Alert is a live region with important, usually time-sensitive information. The use of this alert component will cause immediate notifications for users with assistive technology.

Dismissing the alert

Since alerts are not required to receive focus, it should not be required that the user close the alert.

Applicable WCAG Success Criteria

This section is for reference only. This component intends to conform to the following WCAG Success Criteria:

  • 1.3.1 Info and Relationships (Level A):
    Information, structure, and relationships conveyed through presentation can be programmatically determined or are available in text.
  • 1.3.2 Meaningful Sequence (Level A):
    When the sequence in which content is presented affects its meaning, a correct reading sequence can be programmatically determined.
  • 1.4.1 Use of Color (Level A):
    Color is not used as the only visual means of conveying information, indicating an action, prompting a response, or distinguishing a visual element.
  • 1.4.10 Reflow (Level AA):
    Content can be presented without loss of information or functionality, and without requiring scrolling in two dimensions.
  • 1.4.11 Non-text Contrast (Level AA):
    The visual presentation of the following have a contrast ratio of at least 3:1 against adjacent color(s): user interface components; graphical objects.
  • 1.4.12 Text Spacing (Level AA):
    No loss of content or functionality occurs by setting all of the following and by changing no other style property: line height set to 1.5; spacing following paragraphs set to at least 2x the font size; letter-spacing set at least 0.12x of the font size, word spacing set to at least 0.16 times the font size.
  • 1.4.3 Minimum Contrast (Level AA):
    The visual presentation of text and images of text has a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1
  • 2.1.1 Keyboard (Level A):
    All functionality of the content is operable through a keyboard interface.
  • 2.1.2 No Keyboard Trap (Level A):
    If keyboard focus can be moved to a component of the page using a keyboard interface, then focus can be moved away from that component using only a keyboard interface.
  • 2.2.1 Timing Adjustable (Level A):
    If there are time limitations set by the content, one of the following should be true: turn off, adjust, extend, real-time exception, essential exception, 20 hour exception.
  • 2.5.3 Label in Name (Level A):
    For user interface components with labels that include text or images of text, the name contains the text that is presented visually.
  • 4.1.2 Name, Role, Value (Level A):
    For all user interface components, the name and role can be programmatically determined; states, properties, and values that can be set by the user can be programmatically set; and notification of changes to these items is available to user agents, including assistive technologies.
  • 4.1.3 Status Messages (Level AA):
    In content implemented using markup languages, status messages can be programmatically determined through role or properties such that they can be presented to the user by assistive technologies without receiving focus.

Support

If any accessibility issues have been found within this component, let us know by submitting an issue.

4.10.0

Updated

Alert::Title

  • Added @tag argument

Related