'How to instantiate a File object in JavaScript?

There's a File object in JavaScript. I want to instantiate one for testing purposes.

I have tried new File(), but I get an "Illegal constructor" error.

Is it possible to create a File object ?


File Object reference : https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/File



Solution 1:[1]

According to the W3C File API specification, the File constructor requires 2 (or 3) parameters.

So to create a empty file do:

var f = new File([""], "filename");
  • The first argument is the data provided as an array of lines of text;
  • The second argument is the filename ;
  • The third argument looks like:

    var f = new File([""], "filename.txt", {type: "text/plain", lastModified: date})
    

It works in FireFox, Chrome and Opera, but not in Safari or IE/Edge.

Solution 2:[2]

Now you can!

var parts = [
  new Blob(['you construct a file...'], {type: 'text/plain'}),
  ' Same way as you do with blob',
  new Uint16Array([33])
];

// Construct a file
var file = new File(parts, 'sample.txt', {
    lastModified: new Date(0), // optional - default = now
    type: "overide/mimetype" // optional - default = ''
});

var fr = new FileReader();

fr.onload = function(evt){
   document.body.innerHTML = evt.target.result + "<br><a href="+URL.createObjectURL(file)+" download=" + file.name + ">Download " + file.name + "</a><br>type: "+file.type+"<br>last modified: "+ file.lastModifiedDate
}

fr.readAsText(file);

Solution 3:[3]

Update

BlobBuilder has been obsoleted see how you go using it, if you're using it for testing purposes.

Otherwise apply the below with migration strategies of going to Blob, such as the answers to this question.

Use a Blob instead

As an alternative there is a Blob that you can use in place of File as it is what File interface derives from as per W3C spec:

interface File : Blob {
    readonly attribute DOMString name;
    readonly attribute Date lastModifiedDate;
};

The File interface is based on Blob, inheriting blob functionality and expanding it to support files on the user's system.

Create the Blob

Using the BlobBuilder like this on an existing JavaScript method that takes a File to upload via XMLHttpRequest and supplying a Blob to it works fine like this:

var BlobBuilder = window.MozBlobBuilder || window.WebKitBlobBuilder;
var bb = new BlobBuilder();

var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', 'http://jsfiddle.net/img/logo.png', true);

xhr.responseType = 'arraybuffer';

bb.append(this.response); // Note: not xhr.responseText

//at this point you have the equivalent of: new File()
var blob = bb.getBlob('image/png');

/* more setup code */
xhr.send(blob);

Extended example

The rest of the sample is up on jsFiddle in a more complete fashion but will not successfully upload as I can't expose the upload logic in a long term fashion.

Solution 4:[4]

Now it's possible and supported by all major browsers: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/File/File

var file = new File(["foo"], "foo.txt", {
  type: "text/plain",
});

Solution 5:[5]

The idea ...To create a File object (api) in javaScript for images already present in the DOM :

<img src="../img/Products/fijRKjhudDjiokDhg1524164151.jpg">

var file = new File(['fijRKjhudDjiokDhg1524164151'],
                     '../img/Products/fijRKjhudDjiokDhg1524164151.jpg', 
                     {type:'image/jpg'});

// created object file
console.log(file);

Don't do that ! ... (but I did it anyway)

-> the console give a result similar as an Object File :

File(0) {name: "fijRKjokDhgfsKtG1527053050.jpg", lastModified: 1527053530715, lastModifiedDate: Wed May 23 2018 07:32:10 GMT+0200 (Paris, Madrid (heure d’été)), webkitRelativePath: "", size: 0, …}
lastModified:1527053530715
lastModifiedDate:Wed May 23 2018 07:32:10 GMT+0200 (Paris, Madrid (heure d’été)) {}
name:"fijRKjokDhgfsKtG1527053050.jpg"
size:0
type:"image/jpg"
webkitRelativePath:""__proto__:File

But the size of the object is wrong ...

Why i need to do that ?

For example to retransmit an image form already uploaded, during a product update, along with additional images added during the update

Sources

This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Zakaria
Solution 2
Solution 3 Community
Solution 4 Pavel Evstigneev
Solution 5