FileSaver.js implements the W3C saveAs()
FileSaver interface in browsers that do
not natively support it. There is a FileSaver.js demo that demonstrates saving
various media types.
FileSaver.js is the solution to saving files on the client side, and is perfect for webapps that need to generate files or for saving sensitive information that shouldn't be sent to an external server.
- Firefox 4+
- †Google Chrome
- Opera 11+
- Safari 5+
Unlisted versions of browsers (e.g. Firefox 3.6) will probably work too; I just haven't tested them.
† Google Chrome 14+ supports saving with filenames
FileSaver saveAs(in Blob data, in DOMString filename)
var bb = new BlobBuilder;
bb.append("Hello, world!");
saveAs(bb.getBlob("text/plain;charset=utf-8"), "hello world.txt");
The standard W3C File API BlobBuilder
interface is not available in all browsers.
BlobBuilder.js is a cross-browser BlobBuilder
implementation that solves this.
var canvas = document.getElementById("my-canvas"), ctx = canvas.getContext("2d");
// draw to canvas...
canvas.toBlob(function(blob) {
saveAs(blob, "pretty image.png");
});
Note: The standard HTML5 canvas.toBlob()
method is not available in all browsers.
canvas-toBlob.js is a cross-browser canvas.toBlob()
implementation that solves
this.
var filesaver = saveAs(blob, "secret stuff that you won't send to a server.truecrypt");
filesaver.onwriteend = function() {
// file saved, do something here
};
var filesaver = saveAs(blob, "whatever");
cancel_button.addEventListener("click", function() {
filesaver.abort();
}, false);
This isn't that useful unless you're saving very large files (e.g. generated video).