Convert HTML5 Canvas into File to be uploaded?
For security reasons, you can't set the value of a file-input element directly.
If you want to use a file-input element:
- Create an image from the canvas (as you've done).
- Display that image on a new page.
- Have the user right-click-save-as to their local drive.
- Then they can use your file-input element to upload that newly created file.
Alternatively, you can use Ajax to POST the canvas data:
You asked about blob:
var blobBin = atob(dataURL.split(',')[1]);
var array = [];
for(var i = 0; i < blobBin.length; i++) {
array.push(blobBin.charCodeAt(i));
}
var file=new Blob([new Uint8Array(array)], {type: 'image/png'});
var formdata = new FormData();
formdata.append("myNewFileName", file);
$.ajax({
url: "uploadFile.php",
type: "POST",
data: formdata,
processData: false,
contentType: false,
}).done(function(respond){
alert(respond);
});
Note: blob is generally supported in the latest browsers.
The canvas image needs to be converted to base64 and then from base64 in to binary. This is done using .toDataURL()
and dataURItoBlob()
It was a pretty fiddly process which required piecing together several SO answers, various blog posts and tutorials.
I've created a tutorial you can follow which walks you through the process.
In response to Ateik's comment here's a fiddle which replicates the original post in case you're having trouble viewing the original link. You can also fork my project here.
There's a lot of code but the core of what I'm doing is take a canvas element:
<canvas id="flatten" width="800" height="600"></canvas>
Set it's context to 2D
var snap = document.getElementById('flatten');
var flatten = snap.getContext('2d');
Canvas => Base64 => Binary
function postCanvasToURL() {
// Convert canvas image to Base64
var img = snap.toDataURL();
// Convert Base64 image to binary
var file = dataURItoBlob(img);
}
function dataURItoBlob(dataURI) {
// convert base64/URLEncoded data component to raw binary data held in a string
var byteString;
if (dataURI.split(',')[0].indexOf('base64') >= 0)
byteString = atob(dataURI.split(',')[1]);
else
byteString = unescape(dataURI.split(',')[1]);
// separate out the mime component
var mimeString = dataURI.split(',')[0].split(':')[1].split(';')[0];
// write the bytes of the string to a typed array
var ia = new Uint8Array(byteString.length);
for (var i = 0; i < byteString.length; i++) {
ia[i] = byteString.charCodeAt(i);
}
return new Blob([ia], {type:mimeString});
}
You could stop at base64 if that's all you need, in my case I needed to convert again to binary so that I could pass the data over to twitter (using OAuth) without use of a db. It turns out you can tweet binary which is pretty cool, twitter will convert it back in to an image.
This is what worked for me in the end.
canvas.toBlob((blob) => {
let file = new File([blob], "fileName.jpg", { type: "image/jpeg" })
}, 'image/jpeg');
Currently in spec (very little support as of april '17)
Canvas.toBlob();
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/HTMLCanvasElement/toBlob
EDIT :
The link provides a polyfill (which seems to be slower from the wording), which code is roughtly equivalent to the @pixelomo answer, but with the same api as the native toBlob
method :
A low performance polyfill based on toDataURL :
if (!HTMLCanvasElement.prototype.toBlob) {
Object.defineProperty(HTMLCanvasElement.prototype, 'toBlob', {
value: function (callback, type, quality) {
var canvas = this;
setTimeout(function() {
var binStr = atob( canvas.toDataURL(type, quality).split(',')[1] ),
len = binStr.length,
arr = new Uint8Array(len);
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++ ) {
arr[i] = binStr.charCodeAt(i);
}
callback( new Blob( [arr], {type: type || 'image/png'} ) );
});
}
});
}
To be used this way :
canvas.toBlob(function(blob){...}, 'image/jpeg', 0.95); // JPEG at 95% quality
or
canvas.toBlob(function(blob){...}); // PNG