drag-drop-raynos
v6.1.0
Published
HTML5 drag & drop for humans
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drag-drop
HTML5 drag & drop for humans
In case you didn't know, the HTML5 drag and drop API is a total disaster! This is an attempt to make the API usable by mere mortals.
live demo
See https://instant.io.
features
- simple API
- supports files and directories
- supports modern browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge)
- adds a
drag
class to the drop target on hover, for easy styling! - optionally, get the file(s) as a Buffer (see buffer)
install
npm install drag-drop
This package works in the browser with browserify. If you do not use a bundler, you can use the standalone script directly in a <script>
tag.
usage
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop')
dragDrop('#dropTarget', (files, pos, fileList, directories) => {
console.log('Here are the dropped files', files) // Array of File objects
console.log('Dropped at coordinates', pos.x, pos.y)
console.log('Here is the raw FileList object if you need it:', fileList)
console.log('Here is the list of directories:', directories)
})
Another handy thing this does is add a drag
class to the drop target when the user
is dragging a file over the drop target. Useful for styling the drop target to make
it obvious that this is a drop target!
complete example
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop')
// You can pass in a DOM node or a selector string!
dragDrop('#dropTarget', (files, pos, fileList, directories) => {
console.log('Here are the dropped files', files)
console.log('Dropped at coordinates', pos.x, pos.y)
console.log('Here is the raw FileList object if you need it:', fileList)
console.log('Here is the list of directories:', directories)
// `files` is an Array!
files.forEach(file => {
console.log(file.name)
console.log(file.size)
console.log(file.type)
console.log(file.lastModifiedDate)
console.log(file.fullPath) // not real full path due to browser security restrictions
console.log(file.path) // in Electron, this contains the actual full path
// convert the file to a Buffer that we can use!
const reader = new FileReader()
reader.addEventListener('load', e => {
// e.target.result is an ArrayBuffer
const arr = new Uint8Array(e.target.result)
const buffer = new Buffer(arr)
// do something with the buffer!
})
reader.addEventListener('error', err => {
console.error('FileReader error' + err)
})
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(file)
})
})
get files as buffers
If you prefer to access file data as Buffers, then just require drag-drop like this:
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop/buffer')
dragDrop('#dropTarget', files => {
files.forEach(file => {
// file is actually a buffer!
console.log(file.readUInt32LE(0))
console.log(file.toJSON())
console.log(file.toString('hex')) // etc...
// but it still has all the normal file properties!
console.log(file.name)
console.log(file.size)
console.log(file.type)
console.log(file.lastModifiedDate)
})
})
remove listeners
To stop listening for drag & drop events and remove the event listeners, just use the
remove
function returned by the dragDrop
function.
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop')
const remove = dragDrop('#dropTarget', files => {
// ...
})
// ... at some point in the future, stop listening for drag & drop events
remove()
detect dragenter
, dragover
and dragleave
events
Instead of passing just an ondrop
function as the second argument, instead pass an
object with all the events you want to listen for:
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop')
dragDrop('#dropTarget', {
onDrop: (files, pos, fileList, directories) => {
console.log('Here are the dropped files', files)
console.log('Dropped at coordinates', pos.x, pos.y)
console.log('Here is the raw FileList object if you need it:', fileList)
console.log('Here is the list of directories:', directories)
},
onDragEnter: () => {},
onDragOver: () => {},
onDragLeave: () => {}
})
detect drag-and-dropped text
If the user highlights text and drags it, we capture that as a separate event. Listen for it like this:
const dragDrop = require('drag-drop')
dragDrop('#dropTarget', {
onDropText: (text, pos) => {
console.log('Here is the dropped text:', text)
console.log('Dropped at coordinates', pos.x, pos.y)
}
})
a note about file://
urls
Don't run your app from file://
. For security reasons, browsers do not allow you to
run your app from file://
. In fact, many of the powerful storage APIs throw errors
if you run the app locally from file://
.
Instead, start a local server and visit your site at http://localhost:port
.
license
MIT. Copyright (c) Feross Aboukhadijeh.