HTML Input="file" Accept Attribute File Type (CSV)
Dom this attribute is very old and not accepted in modern browsers as far as I know, But here is an alternative to it, Try this
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
function checkfile(sender) {
var validExts = new Array(".xlsx", ".xls", ".csv");
var fileExt = sender.value;
fileExt = fileExt.substring(fileExt.lastIndexOf('.'));
if (validExts.indexOf(fileExt) < 0) {
alert("Invalid file selected, valid files are of " +
validExts.toString() + " types.");
return false;
}
else return true;
}
</script>
<input type="file" id="file" onchange="checkfile(this);" />
I guess it'll help you of course you can change this script according to your needs.
Well this is embarrassing... I found the solution I was looking for and it couldn't be simpler. I used the following code to get the desired result.
<label for="fileSelect">Spreadsheet</label>
<input id="fileSelect" type="file" accept=".csv, application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, application/vnd.ms-excel" />
Valid Accept Types:
For CSV files (.csv), use:
<input type="file" accept=".csv" />
For Excel Files 97-2003 (.xls), use:
<input type="file" accept="application/vnd.ms-excel" />
For Excel Files 2007+ (.xlsx), use:
<input type="file" accept="application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet" />
For Text Files (.txt) use:
<input type="file" accept="text/plain" />
For Image Files (.png/.jpg/etc), use:
<input type="file" accept="image/*" />
For HTML Files (.htm,.html), use:
<input type="file" accept="text/html" />
For Video Files (.avi, .mpg, .mpeg, .mp4), use:
<input type="file" accept="video/*" />
For Audio Files (.mp3, .wav, etc), use:
<input type="file" accept="audio/*" />
For PDF Files, use:
<input type="file" accept=".pdf" />
DEMO:
http://jsfiddle.net/dirtyd77/LzLcZ/144/
NOTE:
If you are trying to display Excel CSV files (.csv
), do NOT use:
text/csv
application/csv
text/comma-separated-values
(works in Opera only).
If you are trying to display a particular file type (for example, a WAV
or PDF
), then this will almost always work...
<input type="file" accept=".FILETYPE" />
Here's the reason why it is so:
The application
types often mean where to open the file.
For example, Abode Reader.
But when this file is uploaded, the browser doesn't care about opening and asking that app about it. But the extension, however, or type words like the MIME image
or audio
etcetera work applying directly to file units.
It is possible to use them in relation to a File
DOM instance.
So, you should use the extension format name.
On many devices, like mobiles, it is seen when you click select File, that the non- accepted files in the user menu are excluded in grey...
Have a great time spent with your files!
These days you can just use the file extension
<input type="file" ID="fileSelect" accept=".xlsx, .xls, .csv"/>
I have used text/comma-separated-values
for CSV mime-type in accept attribute and it works fine in Opera. Tried text/csv
without luck.
Some others MIME-Types for CSV if the suggested do not work:
- text/comma-separated-values
- text/csv
- application/csv
- application/excel
- application/vnd.ms-excel
- application/vnd.msexcel
- text/anytext
Source: http://filext.com/file-extension/CSV