289

I am new to angular. I am trying to read the uploaded file path from HTML 'file' field whenever a 'change' happens on this field. If i use 'onChange' it works but when i use it angular way using 'ng-change' it doesn't work.

<script>
   var DemoModule = angular.module("Demo",[]);
   DemoModule .controller("form-cntlr",function($scope){
   $scope.selectFile = function()
   {
        $("#file").click();
   }
   $scope.fileNameChaged = function()
   {
        alert("select file");
   }
});
</script>

<div ng-controller="form-cntlr">
    <form>
         <button ng-click="selectFile()">Upload Your File</button>
         <input type="file" style="display:none" 
                          id="file" name='file' ng-Change="fileNameChaged()"/>
    </form>  
</div>

fileNameChaged() is never calling. Firebug also doesn't show any error.

2

15 Answers 15

495

I made a small directive to listen for file input changes.

View JSFiddle

view.html:

<input type="file" custom-on-change="uploadFile">

controller.js:

app.controller('myCtrl', function($scope){
    $scope.uploadFile = function(event){
        var files = event.target.files;
    };
});     

directive.js:

app.directive('customOnChange', function() {
  return {
    restrict: 'A',
    link: function (scope, element, attrs) {
      var onChangeHandler = scope.$eval(attrs.customOnChange);
      element.on('change', onChangeHandler);
      element.on('$destroy', function() {
        element.off();
      });

    }
  };
});
21
  • 4
    This works well if a different file is chosen each time. Is it possible to listen for when the same file is selected as well?
    – JDawg
    Sep 11, 2015 at 21:01
  • 13
    This has one very unfortunate "bug" - the controller is not bound as "this" in the customOnChange, but the file input! It threw me off for a long time and I couldn't find the actual bug. I am not yet sure how to actually call it with correctly set "this". Oct 19, 2015 at 16:59
  • 4
    the fiddle does not work for me, either on Chrome or Firefox, as of today.
    – seguso
    Dec 6, 2015 at 9:41
  • 2
    This answer is flawed as stated by @KarelBílek. I couldn't get around it and decided to use angular-file-upload. Dec 22, 2015 at 19:26
  • 2
    IE and maybe even Chrome doesn't like when you re-upload a file with the same name. Here is how to fix that: stackoverflow.com/questions/12030686/…
    – mellis481
    Jun 1, 2016 at 19:10
249

No binding support for File Upload control

https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/1375

<div ng-controller="form-cntlr">
        <form>
             <button ng-click="selectFile()">Upload Your File</button>
             <input type="file" style="display:none" 
                id="file" name='file' onchange="angular.element(this).scope().fileNameChanged(this)" />
        </form>  
    </div>

instead of

 <input type="file" style="display:none" 
    id="file" name='file' ng-Change="fileNameChanged()" />

can you try

<input type="file" style="display:none" 
    id="file" name='file' onchange="angular.element(this).scope().fileNameChanged()" />

Note: this requires the angular application to always be in debug mode. This will not work in production code if debug mode is disabled.

and in your function changes instead of

$scope.fileNameChanged = function() {
   alert("select file");
}

can you try

$scope.fileNameChanged = function() {
  console.log("select file");
}

Below is one working example of file upload with drag drop file upload may be helpful http://jsfiddle.net/danielzen/utp7j/

Angular File Upload Information

URL for AngularJS File Upload in ASP.Net

https://github.com/geersch/AngularJSFileUpload

AngularJs native multi-file upload with progress with NodeJS

http://jasonturim.wordpress.com/2013/09/12/angularjs-native-multi-file-upload-with-progress/

ngUpload - An AngularJS Service for uploading files using iframe

http://ngmodules.org/modules/ngUpload

17
  • 2
    onchange="angular.element(this).scope().fileNameChaged(this)" $scope.fileNameChaged = function(element) { console.log('files:', element.files); } Can you change in two place and check ? depending on browser you will get the file full path i have update the fiddle below is the url upload file and check console jsfiddle.net/utp7j/260 Jul 29, 2013 at 12:43
  • 14
    This method circumvents the default AngularJS processing, so $scope.$digest() isn't called (bindings aren't updated). Call 'angular.element(this).scope().$digest()' afterwards or call a scope method that uses $apply. May 26, 2014 at 9:01
  • 120
    This is a horrible answer. Calling angular.element(blah).scope() is a debug feature that you should only use for debugging. Angular doesn't use the .scope feature. It is only there to help developers debug. When you build your app and deploy to production, you are supposed to turn debug info off. This speeds up your all A LOT!!! So, to write code that depends on element.scope() calls is a bad idea. Don't do this. The answer about creating a custom directive is the right way to do this. @JQueryGuru you should update your answer. Because it has the most votes, people will follow this bad advice.
    – frosty
    Dec 17, 2014 at 23:50
  • 7
    This solution will break the app when debug info is disabled. Disabling that for production is an official recommendation docs.angularjs.org/guide/production. Please see also blog.thoughtram.io/angularjs/2014/12/22/…
    – wiherek
    Feb 13, 2015 at 18:31
  • 4
    BAD SOLUTION ... ... read other comments about 'turning off debugging' ... ... ... and see sqren's solution ... ... ... @0MV1
    – dsdsdsdsd
    Mar 14, 2016 at 16:39
43

This is a refinement of some of the other ones around, the data will end up in an ng-model, which is normally what you want.

Markup (just make an attribute data-file so the directive can find it)

<input
    data-file
    id="id_image" name="image"
    ng-model="my_image_model" type="file">

JS

app.directive('file', function() {
    return {
        require:"ngModel",
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function($scope, el, attrs, ngModel){
            el.bind('change', function(event){
                var files = event.target.files;
                var file = files[0];

                ngModel.$setViewValue(file);
                $scope.$apply();
            });
        }
    };
});
2
  • 1
    Is $scope.$apply(); required? My ng-change event still seems to fire without it.
    – row1
    Jan 19, 2015 at 23:02
  • 1
    @row1 you only need to manually fire an apply if you have other angular things that need to know about it during that operation. Jul 7, 2015 at 22:24
27

The clean way is to write your own directive to bind to "change" event. Just to let you know IE9 does not support FormData so you cannot really get the file object from the change event.

You can use ng-file-upload library which already supports IE with FileAPI polyfill and simplify the posting the file to the server. It uses a directive to achieve this.

<script src="angular.min.js"></script>
<script src="ng-file-upload.js"></script>

<div ng-controller="MyCtrl">
  <input type="file" ngf-select="onFileSelect($files)" multiple>
</div>

JS:

//inject angular file upload directive.
angular.module('myApp', ['ngFileUpload']);

var MyCtrl = [ '$scope', 'Upload', function($scope, Upload) {
  $scope.onFileSelect = function($files) {
    //$files: an array of files selected, each file has name, size, and type.
    for (var i = 0; i < $files.length; i++) {
      var $file = $files[i];
      Upload.upload({
        url: 'my/upload/url',
        data: {file: $file}
      }).then(function(data, status, headers, config) {
        // file is uploaded successfully
        console.log(data);
      }); 
    }
  }
}];
1
  • This example is outdated. Get new one from docs here. Dec 22, 2015 at 19:37
26

I've expanded on @Stuart Axon's idea to add two-way binding for the file input (i.e. allow resetting the input by resetting the model value back to null):

app.directive('bindFile', [function () {
    return {
        require: "ngModel",
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function ($scope, el, attrs, ngModel) {
            el.bind('change', function (event) {
                ngModel.$setViewValue(event.target.files[0]);
                $scope.$apply();
            });

            $scope.$watch(function () {
                return ngModel.$viewValue;
            }, function (value) {
                if (!value) {
                    el.val("");
                }
            });
        }
    };
}]);

Demo

1
  • Thank you @JLRishe. One note , actually data-ng-click="vm.theFile=''" works well , no need to write it to a controller method
    – Sergey
    Apr 27, 2016 at 23:33
21

Similar to some of the other good answers here, I wrote a directive to solve this problem, but this implementation more closely mirrors the angular way of attaching events.

You can use the directive like this:

HTML

<input type="file" file-change="yourHandler($event, files)" />

As you can see, you can inject the files selected into your event handler, as you would inject an $event object into any ng event handler.

Javascript

angular
  .module('yourModule')
  .directive('fileChange', ['$parse', function($parse) {

    return {
      require: 'ngModel',
      restrict: 'A',
      link: function ($scope, element, attrs, ngModel) {

        // Get the function provided in the file-change attribute.
        // Note the attribute has become an angular expression,
        // which is what we are parsing. The provided handler is 
        // wrapped up in an outer function (attrHandler) - we'll 
        // call the provided event handler inside the handler()
        // function below.
        var attrHandler = $parse(attrs['fileChange']);

        // This is a wrapper handler which will be attached to the
        // HTML change event.
        var handler = function (e) {

          $scope.$apply(function () {

            // Execute the provided handler in the directive's scope.
            // The files variable will be available for consumption
            // by the event handler.
            attrHandler($scope, { $event: e, files: e.target.files });
          });
        };

        // Attach the handler to the HTML change event 
        element[0].addEventListener('change', handler, false);
      }
    };
  }]);
2
  • struggled for a couple days with this until i tried your answer. Thanks!
    – MikeT
    Dec 27, 2016 at 20:52
  • How could I pass an additional parameter to the fileChange expression? I'm using this directive inside an ng-repeat and the $scope variable passed to attrHandler is the same for each record. What's the best solution?
    – user1077685
    Apr 19, 2017 at 12:56
18

This directive pass the selected files as well:

/**
 *File Input - custom call when the file has changed
 */
.directive('onFileChange', function() {
  return {
    restrict: 'A',
    link: function (scope, element, attrs) {
      var onChangeHandler = scope.$eval(attrs.onFileChange);

      element.bind('change', function() {
        scope.$apply(function() {
          var files = element[0].files;
          if (files) {
            onChangeHandler(files);
          }
        });
      });

    }
  };
});

The HTML, how to use it:

<input type="file" ng-model="file" on-file-change="onFilesSelected">

In my controller:

$scope.onFilesSelected = function(files) {
     console.log("files - " + files);
};
4
  • How the $scope.onFilesSelected looks like in your controller? Jan 23, 2017 at 13:54
  • If a file is opened and when we try uploading in the file in Microsoft Edge browser. Nothing is happening. Can you help? Feb 23, 2017 at 12:31
  • Yes, it is working fine with other browsers. i am facing issue in microsoft edge @ingaham Feb 24, 2017 at 6:13
  • This is exactly what i needed thank you. Sep 27, 2021 at 20:36
8

I recommend to create a directive

<input type="file" custom-on-change handler="functionToBeCalled(params)">

app.directive('customOnChange', [function() {
        'use strict';

        return {
            restrict: "A",

            scope: {
                handler: '&'
            },
            link: function(scope, element){

                element.change(function(event){
                    scope.$apply(function(){
                        var params = {event: event, el: element};
                        scope.handler({params: params});
                    });
                });
            }

        };
    }]);

this directive can be used many times, it uses its own scope and doesn't depend on parent scope. You can also give some params to handler function. Handler function will be called with scope object, that was active when you changed the input. $apply updates your model each time the change event is called

4

The simplest Angular jqLite version.

JS:

.directive('cOnChange', function() {
    'use strict';

    return {
        restrict: "A",
        scope : {
            cOnChange: '&'
        },
        link: function (scope, element) {
            element.on('change', function () {
                scope.cOnChange();
        });
        }
    };
});

HTML:

<input type="file" data-c-on-change="your.functionName()">
1
  • If a file is opened and when we try uploading in the file in Microsoft Edge browser. Nothing is happening. Can you help? Feb 23, 2017 at 12:25
2

Working Demo of "files-input" Directive that Works with ng-change1

To make an <input type=file> element work the ng-change directive, it needs a custom directive that works with the ng-model directive.

<input type="file" files-input ng-model="fileList" 
       ng-change="onInputChange()" multiple />

The DEMO

angular.module("app",[])
.directive("filesInput", function() {
  return {
    require: "ngModel",
    link: function postLink(scope,elem,attrs,ngModel) {
      elem.on("change", function(e) {
        var files = elem[0].files;
        ngModel.$setViewValue(files);
      })
    }
  }
})

.controller("ctrl", function($scope) {
     $scope.onInputChange = function() {
         console.log("input change");
     };
})
<script src="//unpkg.com/angular/angular.js"></script>
  <body ng-app="app" ng-controller="ctrl">
    <h1>AngularJS Input `type=file` Demo</h1>
    
    <input type="file" files-input ng-model="fileList" 
           ng-change="onInputChange()" multiple />
    
    <h2>Files</h2>
    <div ng-repeat="file in fileList">
      {{file.name}}
    </div>
  </body>

4
  • Great but directive is only called once ! If I change file selected then directive is not called a second time ! Do you have any idea about this behavior ?
    – hugsbrugs
    Apr 5, 2020 at 15:59
  • The DEMO doesn't have that problem. Create a new question with a reproducible example for readers to examine.
    – georgeawg
    Apr 5, 2020 at 17:35
  • yes it have that problem the console log "input change" only displays once even if you change selected files many times !
    – hugsbrugs
    Apr 5, 2020 at 19:10
  • after testing, it works on chromium but it doesn't on latest firefox version ... damn browser compatibilty !!!
    – hugsbrugs
    Apr 6, 2020 at 14:45
1

Too complete solution base on:

`onchange="angular.element(this).scope().UpLoadFile(this.files)"`

A simple way to hide the input field and replace it with a image, here after a solution, that also require a hack on angular but that do the job [TriggerEvent does not work as expected]

The solution:

  • place the input-field in display:none [the input field exist in the DOM but is not visible]
  • place your image right after On the image use nb-click() to activate a method

When the image is clicked simulate a DOM action 'click' on the input field. Et voilà!

 var tmpl = '<input type="file" id="{{name}}-filein"' + 
             'onchange="angular.element(this).scope().UpLoadFile(this.files)"' +
             ' multiple accept="{{mime}}/*" style="display:none" placeholder="{{placeholder}}">'+
             ' <img id="{{name}}-img" src="{{icon}}" ng-click="clicked()">' +
             '';
   // Image was clicked let's simulate an input (file) click
   scope.inputElem = elem.find('input'); // find input in directive
   scope.clicked = function () {
         console.log ('Image clicked');
         scope.inputElem[0].click(); // Warning Angular TriggerEvent does not work!!!
    };
1
  • 2
    You cannot use angular.element(this).scope(), this is a debug feature!
    – Cesar
    Feb 5, 2019 at 7:35
1

Another interesting way to listen to file input changes is with a watch over the ng-model attribute of the input file. Of course, FileModel is a custom directive.

Like this:

HTML -> <input type="file" file-model="change.fnEvidence">

JS Code ->

$scope.$watch('change.fnEvidence', function() {
                    alert("has changed");
                });

Hope it can help someone.

0

I have done it like this;

<!-- HTML -->
<button id="uploadFileButton" class="btn btn-info" ng-click="vm.upload()">    
<span  class="fa fa-paperclip"></span></button>
<input type="file" id="txtUploadFile" name="fileInput" style="display: none;" />
// self is the instance of $scope or this
self.upload = function () {
   var ctrl = angular.element("#txtUploadFile");
   ctrl.on('change', fileNameChanged);
   ctrl.click();
}

function fileNameChanged(e) {
    console.log(self.currentItem);
    alert("select file");
}
0

Angular elements (such as the root element of a directive) are jQuery [Lite] objects. This means we can register the event listener like so:

link($scope, $el) {
    const fileInputSelector = '.my-file-input'

    function setFile() {
        // access file via $el.find(fileInputSelector).get(0).files[0]
    }

    $el.on('change', fileInputSelector, setFile)
}

This is jQuery event delegation. Here, the listener is attached to the root element of the directive. When the event is triggered, it will bubble up to the registered element and jQuery will determine if the event originated on an inner element matching the defined selector. If it does, the handler will fire.

Benefits of this method are:

  • the handler is bound to the $element which will be automatically cleaned up when the directive scope is destroyed.
  • no code in the template
  • will work even if the target delegate (input) has not yet been rendered when you register the event handler (such as when using ng-if or ng-switch)

http://api.jquery.com/on/

-1

You can simply add the below code in onchange and it will detect change. you can write a function on X click or something to remove file data..

document.getElementById(id).value = "";
1
  • This is bad practice and not angular like.
    – Sebastian
    Nov 28, 2019 at 9:24

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