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@placemarkio/flat-drop-files

The Drag & Drop dataTransfer interface is powerful, but torturous. It has grown organically and via standards, and is full of footguns which make it trivially easy to mess up.

This is an attempt to make it all "just work." The input is a dataTransfer.items list, and the output is a normalized list of files, with a handle property that's a FileSystemFileHandle, and a path property that's a reconstructed relative file path.

This module takes care of:

This is at the bleeding edge of the web, so there are some caveats.

Installation

This module is published on npm as @placemarkio/flat-drop-files.

Example

import { getFilesFromDataTransferItems } from "@placemarkio/flat-drop-files";

const zone = document.getElementById('zone');

zone.addEventListener("dragenter", (e) => {
  e.preventDefault();
});

zone.addEventListener("dragover", (e) => {
  e.preventDefault();
});

zone.addEventListener("drop", (e) => {
  e.preventDefault();
  getFilesFromDataTransferItems(e.dataTransfer.items).then(files => {
    console.log(files);
  });
});

Compatibility

This module is compatible with modern browsers: the baseline is browsers that support webkitGetAsEntry. It does not support IE11 or any other ancient browsers.

Ecosystem

The browser-fs-access module is highly recommended to work with the file objects returned by this module: with it, you can write back to the files using the file.handle property.

Source

This is inspired by datatransfer-files-promise, contains collected lessons from dropzone, and adapts its junk-file detection from Sindre Sorhus's excellent junk module.

Testing

This kind of module is exceptionally hard to test with automated tests. Thus, there's a manual test suite. Start the test suite with yarn start, which will boot up a local server, and follow the instructions, which involve dragging & dropping particular files and folders into the browser.

Comments

You'll find plenty of comments in index.ts about different gotchas and traps in the DataTransferItem, FileSystemEntry, and other APIs. It's unfortunately easy to get these things wrong, whether it's assuming that DataTransferItem.kind will correctly identify a directory, or forgetting to call readEntries on a directory reader repeatedly to page through each 100-item batch of files.