Link Use link for navigating from one page to another.
AlphaNot reviewed for accessibility The Link component styles anchor tags with default hyperlink color cues and hover text decoration. Link
is used for destinations, or moving from one page to another.
< Link href = " https://github.com " > Link </ Link >
Name Type Default Description href string URL to be used for the Link. (The `href` is passed to the underlying `<a>` element). muted boolean false Uses a less prominent shade for Link color, and the default link shade on hover underline boolean false Adds underline to the Link hoverColor string Color used when hovering over link ref React.RefObject<HTMLAnchorElement> A ref to the element rendered by this component. sx SystemStyleObject Style overrides to apply to the component. See also overriding styles .
Component props and basic example usage of the component are documented on primer.style/react . Component does not have any unnecessary third-party dependencies. Component can adapt to different themes. Component can adapt to different screen sizes. Component has robust unit test coverage (100% where achievable). Component has visual regression coverage of its default and interactive states. Component does not introduce any axe violations. Component has been manually reviewed by the accessibility team and any resulting issues have been addressed. Component is used in a production application. Common usage examples are documented on primer.style/react . Common usage examples are documented in storybook stories. Component has been reviewed by a systems designer and any resulting issues have been addressed. Component does not introduce any performance regressions. Component API has been stable with no breaking changes for at least one month. Feedback on API usability has been sought from developers using the component and any resulting issues have been addressed. Component has corresponding design guidelines documented in the interface guidelines . Component has corresponding Figma component in the Primer Web library. Tooling (such as linters, codemods, etc.) exists to prevent further use of alternatives.