Blob
Baseline
Widely available
*
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
* Some parts of this feature may have varying levels of support.
Note: This feature is available in Web Workers.
The Blob interface represents a blob, which is a file-like object of immutable, raw data; they can be read as text or binary data, or converted into a ReadableStream so its methods can be used for processing the data.
Blobs can represent data that isn't necessarily in a JavaScript-native format. The File interface is based on Blob, inheriting blob functionality and expanding it to support files on the user's system.
Using blobs
To construct a Blob from other non-blob objects and data, use the Blob() constructor. To create a blob that contains a subset of another blob's data, use the slice() method. To obtain a Blob object for a file on the user's file system, see the File documentation.
The APIs accepting Blob objects are also listed in the File documentation.
Constructor
Blob()-
Returns a newly created
Blobobject which contains a concatenation of all of the data in the array passed into the constructor.
Instance properties
Instance methods
Blob.arrayBuffer()-
Returns a promise that resolves with an
ArrayBuffercontaining the entire contents of theBlobas binary data. Blob.bytes()-
Returns a promise that resolves with an
Uint8Arraycontaining the contents of theBlob. Blob.slice()-
Returns a new
Blobobject containing the data in the specified range of bytes of the blob on which it's called. Blob.stream()-
Returns a
ReadableStreamthat can be used to read the contents of theBlob. Blob.text()-
Returns a promise that resolves with a string containing the entire contents of the
Blobinterpreted as UTF-8 text.
Examples
>Creating a blob
The Blob() constructor can create blobs from other objects. For example, to construct a blob from a JSON string:
const obj = { hello: "world" };
const blob = new Blob([JSON.stringify(obj, null, 2)], {
type: "application/json",
});
Creating a URL representing the contents of a typed array
The following example creates a JavaScript typed array and creates a new Blob containing the typed array's data. It then calls URL.createObjectURL() to convert the blob into a URL.
<p>
This example creates a typed array containing the ASCII codes for the space
character through the letter Z, then converts it to an object URL. A link to
open that object URL is created. Click the link to see the decoded object URL.
</p>
The main piece of this code for example purposes is the typedArrayToURL() function, which creates a Blob from the given typed array and returns an object URL for it. Having converted the data into an object URL, it can be used in a number of ways, including as the value of the <img> element's src attribute (assuming the data contains an image, of course).
function showViewLiveResultButton() {
if (window.self !== window.top) {
// Ensure that if our document is in a frame, we get the user
// to first open it in its own tab or window. Otherwise, this
// example won't work.
const p = document.querySelector("p");
p.textContent = "";
const button = document.createElement("button");
button.textContent = "View live result of the example code above";
p.append(button);
button.addEventListener("click", () => window.open(location.href));
return true;
}
return false;
}
if (!showViewLiveResultButton()) {
function typedArrayToURL(typedArray, mimeType) {
return URL.createObjectURL(
new Blob([typedArray.buffer], { type: mimeType }),
);
}
const bytes = new Uint8Array(59);
for (let i = 0; i < 59; i++) {
bytes[i] = 32 + i;
}
const url = typedArrayToURL(bytes, "text/plain");
const link = document.createElement("a");
link.href = url;
link.innerText = "Open the array URL";
document.body.appendChild(link);
}
Extracting data from a blob
One way to read content from a Blob is to use a FileReader. The following code reads the content of a Blob as a typed array:
const reader = new FileReader();
reader.addEventListener("loadend", () => {
// reader.result contains the contents of blob as a typed array
});
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);
Another way to read content from a Blob is to use a Response. The following code reads the content of a Blob as text:
const text = await new Response(blob).text();
Or by using Blob.text():
const text = await blob.text();
By using other methods of FileReader, it is possible to read the contents of a Blob as a string or a data URL.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| File API> # blob-section> |
Browser compatibility
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