Using the Document Picture-in-Picture API

Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.

Secure context: This feature is available only in secure contexts (HTTPS), in some or all supporting browsers.

This guide provides a walkthrough of typical usage of the Document Picture-in-Picture API.

Note: You can see the featured demo in action at Document Picture-in-Picture API Example (see the full source code also).

Sample HTML

The following HTML sets up a basic video player.

html
<div id="container">
  <p class="in-pip-message">
    Video player is currently in the separate Picture-in-Picture window.
  </p>
  <div id="player">
    <video
      src="assets/bigbuckbunny.mp4"
      id="video"
      controls
      width="320"></video>

    <div id="credits">
      <a href="https://peach.blender.org/download/" target="_blank">
        Video by Blender </a
      >;
      <a href="https://peach.blender.org/about/" target="_blank">
        licensed CC-BY 3.0
      </a>
    </div>

    <div id="control-bar">
      <p class="no-picture-in-picture">
        Document Picture-in-Picture API not available
      </p>

      <p></p>
    </div>
  </div>
</div>

Feature detection

To check if the Document Picture-in-Picture API is supported, you can test whether documentPictureInPicture is available on window:

js
if ("documentPictureInPicture" in window) {
  document.querySelector(".no-picture-in-picture").remove();

  const togglePipButton = document.createElement("button");
  togglePipButton.textContent = "Toggle Picture-in-Picture";
  togglePipButton.addEventListener("click", togglePictureInPicture, false);

  document.getElementById("control-bar").appendChild(togglePipButton);
}

If it is available, we remove the "Document Picture-in-Picture API not available" message and instead add a <button> element to open the video player in a Document Picture-in-Picture window.

Open a Picture-in-Picture window

The following JavaScript calls window.documentPictureInPicture.requestWindow() to open a blank Picture-in-Picture window. The returned Promise fulfills with a Picture-in-Picture Window object. The video player is moved to that window using Element.append(), and we display the message informing the user that it has been moved.

The width and height options of requestWindow() set the Picture-in-Picture window to the desired size. Browsers may clamp the option values if they are too large or too small to fit a user-friendly window size.

js
async function togglePictureInPicture() {
  // Early return if there's already a Picture-in-Picture window open
  if (window.documentPictureInPicture.window) {
    return;
  }

  // Open a Picture-in-Picture window.
  const pipWindow = await window.documentPictureInPicture.requestWindow({
    width: videoPlayer.clientWidth,
    height: videoPlayer.clientHeight,
  });

  // ...

  // Move the player to the Picture-in-Picture window.
  pipWindow.document.body.append(videoPlayer);

  // Display a message to say it has been moved
  inPipMessage.style.display = "block";
}

Copy style sheets to the Picture-in-Picture window

To copy all CSS style sheets from the originating window, loop through all style sheets explicitly linked into or embedded in the document (via Document.styleSheets) and append them to the Picture-in-Picture window. Note that this is a one-time copy.

js
// ...

// Copy style sheets over from the initial document
// so that the player looks the same.
[...document.styleSheets].forEach((styleSheet) => {
  try {
    const cssRules = [...styleSheet.cssRules]
      .map((rule) => rule.cssText)
      .join("");
    const style = document.createElement("style");

    style.textContent = cssRules;
    pipWindow.document.head.appendChild(style);
  } catch (e) {
    const link = document.createElement("link");

    link.rel = "stylesheet";
    link.type = styleSheet.type;
    link.media = styleSheet.media;
    link.href = styleSheet.href;
    pipWindow.document.head.appendChild(link);
  }
});

// ...

Target styles when in Picture-in-Picture mode

The picture-in-picture value of the display-mode media feature allows developers to apply CSS to a document based on whether it is being displayed in Picture-in-Picture mode. Basic usage looks like so:

css
@media (display-mode: picture-in-picture) {
  body {
    background: red;
  }
}

This snippet will turn the background of the document <body> red, only when it is displayed in Picture-in-Picture mode.

In our demo, we combine the display-mode: picture-in-picture value with the prefers-color-scheme media feature to create light and dark color schemes that are applied based on the user's color scheme preference, only when the app is being shown in Picture-in-Picture mode.

css
@media (display-mode: picture-in-picture) and (prefers-color-scheme: light) {
  body {
    background: antiquewhite;
  }
}

@media (display-mode: picture-in-picture) and (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
  body {
    background: #333;
  }

  a {
    color: antiquewhite;
  }
}

Handle when the Picture-in-Picture window closes

The code for toggling the Picture-in-Picture window closed again when the button is pressed a second time looks like this:

js
inPipMessage.style.display = "none";
playerContainer.append(videoPlayer);
window.documentPictureInPicture.window.close();

Here we reverse the DOM changes — hiding the message and putting the video player back in the player container in the main app window. We also close the Picture-in-Picture window programmatically using the Window.close() method.

However, you also need to consider the case where the user closes the Picture-in-Picture window by pressing the browser-supplied UI close control on the window itself. You can handle this by detecting when the window closes using the pagehide event:

js
pipWindow.addEventListener("pagehide", (event) => {
  inPipMessage.style.display = "none";
  playerContainer.append(videoPlayer);
});

Note: The browser-supplied UI close control can be hidden by setting the disallowReturnToOpener hint to true in the options object when calling DocumentPictureInPicture.requestWindow() to open the Picture-in-Picture window in the first place.

Listen to when the website enters Picture-in-Picture

Listen to the enter event on the DocumentPictureInPicture instance to know when a Picture-in-Picture window is opened.

In our demo, we use the enter event to add a mute toggle button to the Picture-in-Picture window:

js
documentPictureInPicture.addEventListener("enter", (event) => {
  const pipWindow = event.window;
  console.log("Video player has entered the pip window");

  const pipMuteButton = pipWindow.document.createElement("button");
  pipMuteButton.textContent = "Mute";
  pipMuteButton.addEventListener("click", () => {
    const pipVideo = pipWindow.document.querySelector("#video");
    if (!pipVideo.muted) {
      pipVideo.muted = true;
      pipMuteButton.textContent = "Unmute";
    } else {
      pipVideo.muted = false;
      pipMuteButton.textContent = "Mute";
    }
  });

  pipWindow.document.body.append(pipMuteButton);
});

Note: The DocumentPictureInPictureEvent event object contains a window property to access the Picture-in-Picture window.

Access elements and handle events

You can access elements in the Picture-in-Picture window in several different ways:

js
const pipWindow = window.documentPictureInPicture.window;
if (pipWindow) {
  // Mute video playing in the Picture-in-Picture window.
  const pipVideo = pipWindow.document.querySelector("#video");
  pipVideo.muted = true;
}

Once you've got a reference to the Picture-in-Picture window instance, you can manipulate the DOM (for example creating buttons) and respond to user input events (such as click) as you would do normally in the regular browser window context.