Banner
Highlights important information or required actions prominently within the interface. Use to communicate statuses, provide feedback, or draw attention to critical updates.
Anchor to propertiesProperties
Determines whether the close button of the banner is present.
When the close button is pressed, the dismiss
event will fire, then hidden
will be true, any animation will complete, and the afterhide
event will fire.
The title of the banner.
Determines whether the banner is hidden.
If this property is being set on each framework render (as in 'controlled' usage), and the banner is dismissible
, ensure you update app state for this property when the dismiss
event fires.
If the banner is not dismissible
, it can still be hidden by setting this property.
Sets the tone of the Banner, based on the intention of the information being conveyed.
The banner is a live region and the type of status will be dictated by the Tone selected.
critical
creates an assertive live region that is announced by screen readers immediately.neutral
,info
,success
,warning
andcaution
creates an informative live region that is announced by screen readers after the current message.
Anchor to eventsEvents
Learn more about registering events.
Anchor to slotsSlots
The secondary actions to display at the bottom of the banner.
A maximum of two s-button
components are allowed, and only buttons with the variant
of "secondary" are permitted.
Code
Preview
Anchor to outside-of-a-sectionOutside of a section
Banners placed outside of a section will display in their own card and should be located at the top of the page. They're useful for conveying messages that apply to the entire page or areas not visible within the viewport, such as validation errors further down the page.
Anchor to in-a-sectionIn a section
Banners placed inside a section will have styles applied contextually. They're useful for conveying messages relevant to a specific section or piece of content.
Anchor to best-practicesBest practices
- Seeing these banners can be stressful, so use them sparingly to avoid overwhelming users.
- Focus on a single piece of information or required action to avoid overwhelming users.
- Make the message concise and scannable. Users shouldn’t need to spend a lot of time figuring out what they need to know and do.
- Info, Warning and Critical banners should contain a call to action and clear next steps. Users should know what to do after seeing the banner.
- Avoid banners that can't be dismissed unless the user is required to take action.