172

I'm building a drag-and-drop-to-upload web application using HTML5, and I'm dropping the files onto a div and of course fetching the dataTransfer object, which gives me the FileList.

Now I want to remove some of the files, but I don't know how, or if it's even possible.

Preferably I'd like to just delete them from the FileList; I've got no use for them. But if that's not possible, should I instead write in checks in code that interacts with the FileList? That seems cumbersome.

Michael Heilemann
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  • Just curious: why do you want to do this? Why do you say “I've got no use for them” about (some) files the user selected? – Marcel Korpel Jul 01 '10 at 23:12
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    It's probably more so that the user can remove files prior to upload. If you had originally selected 20 and then you decide you actually don't want to upload the 14th, then you can't just remove that one, you have to start all over again (which is a bit of a pain). I think making FileList readonly is a bad oversight, unless there's some security implication I'm not seeing. – Rafael Jul 11 '10 at 11:41
  • It's security troubles with deleting files from input's FileList directly but you can clone that FileList immediately after closing file upload dialog and then modify this clone & use it when posting via ajax – alex_1948511 Jan 30 '20 at 13:32

18 Answers18

205

If you want to delete only several of the selected files: you can't. The File API Working Draft you linked to contains a note:

The HTMLInputElement interface [HTML5] has a readonly FileList attribute, […]
[emphasis mine]

Reading a bit of the HTML 5 Working Draft, I came across the Common input element APIs. It appears you can delete the entire file list by setting the value property of the input object to an empty string, like:

document.getElementById('multifile').value = "";

BTW, the article Using files from web applications might also be of interest.

Marcel Korpel
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    Note that an attribute being readonly does *not* mean that you can't change the object that it points to. You could manipulate FileList (if that were possible), it just means you can't assign a new FileList to it. – Robin Berjon Mar 11 '13 at 15:29
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    @RobinBerjon Chrome seems to ignore the ´readonly´ attribute while FireFox does not allow write operations. Unfortunately your suggestion to just *manipulate* the FileList does not work in FireFox either. – borisdiakur Dec 12 '13 at 10:53
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    Only the `length` is readonly, I think. I try to delete a item with splice, it fails in Chrome. – zhiyelee Jun 04 '15 at 21:31
  • Is there any way to add? – streetlight Aug 26 '15 at 13:52
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    @streetlight That would be a *huge* security vulnerability, if the site owner can determine which files to upload from a user's machine. – Marcel Korpel Aug 27 '15 at 14:26
  • Thanks, you just saved me an hour after I already tried this for an hour other ways. As one would expect, I also tested and this works with JQuery selector. $([selector]).val(''). ie $('#files').val(''); – Rentering.com Jan 12 '16 at 15:53
  • Setting the `value` of the `` element to `null` seems to works exactly the same as `''`, by the way. – 2540625 Nov 23 '16 at 03:56
  • surely it's feasible to add/remove files based on events triggered by user, no? I'm making a gallery where users can upload files multiple times by clicking Add Images, but im stuck because you can't add files to file list only replace, this leaves me with only ajax as an option. – Muhammad Umer Feb 05 '18 at 01:36
  • `files` of `HTMLInputElement` **is not readonly** already more than for 3 years. – KeyKi Dec 02 '20 at 08:33
64

Since JavaScript FileList is readonly and cannot be manipulated directly,

BEST METHOD

You will have to loop through the input.files while comparing it with the index of the file you want to remove. At the same time, you will use new DataTransfer() to set a new list of files excluding the file you want to remove from the file list.

With this approach, the value of the input.files itself is changed.

removeFileFromFileList(index) {
  const dt = new DataTransfer()
  const input = document.getElementById('files')
  const { files } = input
  
  for (let i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
    const file = files[i]
    if (index !== i)
      dt.items.add(file) // here you exclude the file. thus removing it.
  }
  
  input.files = dt.files // Assign the updates list
}

ALTERNATIVE METHOD

Another simple method is to convert the FileList into an array and then splice it.

But this approach will not change the input.files

const input = document.getElementById('files')
// as an array, u have more freedom to transform the file list using array functions.
const fileListArr = Array.from(input.files)
fileListArr.splice(index, 1) // here u remove the file
console.log(fileListArr)
Salih Kavaf
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Tunji Oyeniran
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    thanx you so much for this, however note that unless u r removing the files from the end of the list, at some point nothing will be removed because the indexes are being reset on each loop, so to get around that its better to use this trick https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/how-to-get-the-child-node-index-in-javascript/ – ctf0 Oct 22 '20 at 05:21
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    @ct0 thats why you should loop in reverse. From back to start of array. So you never mess up indices. – The Fool Mar 27 '21 at 12:04
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    Thank you for your alternative method, it works!!! (: – Fedoro Dec 02 '22 at 16:09
34

This question has already been marked answered, but I'd like to share some information that might help others with using FileList.

It would be convenient to treat a FileList as an array, but methods like sort, shift, pop, and slice don't work. As others have suggested, you can copy the FileList to an array. However, rather than using a loop, there's a simple one line solution to handle this conversion.

 // fileDialog.files is a FileList 

 var fileBuffer=[];

 // append the file list to an array
 Array.prototype.push.apply( fileBuffer, fileDialog.files ); // <-- here

 // And now you may manipulated the result as required

 // shift an item off the array
 var file = fileBuffer.shift(0,1);  // <-- works as expected
 console.info( file.name + ", " + file.size + ", " + file.type );

 // sort files by size
 fileBuffer.sort(function(a,b) {
    return a.size > b.size ? 1 : a.size < b.size ? -1 : 0;
 });

Tested OK in FF, Chrome, and IE10+

Yogi
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    `Array.from(fileDialog.files)` is simpler – Muhammad Umer Feb 05 '18 at 01:40
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    @Muhammad Umer - Thanks, I agree that it is simpler and it is listed as an alternative answer. Yet, it depends on which browsers one must support and if they require a pollyfill to use Array.from(). See: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36810954/943435 – Yogi Feb 05 '18 at 03:51
  • How do you actually modify the FileList? Assign this new array to the input `fileDialog.files = fileBuffer ` ? – eozzy Jan 02 '19 at 02:00
  • @3zzy - It's possible to modify FileList, but only in modern browsers. See this SO questions for details: https://stackoverflow.com/a/47522812/943435 – Yogi Jan 28 '19 at 15:38
  • is it shift() or splice() ? I think it should be the later. – Xavier Nicollet Aug 19 '21 at 12:17
26

If you are targeting evergreen browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, but also works in Safari 9+) or you can afford a polyfill, you can turn the FileList into an array by using Array.from() like this:

let fileArray = Array.from(fileList);

Then it's easy to handle the array of Files like any other array.

adlr0
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14

Since we are in the HTML5 realm, this is my solution. The gist is that you push the files to an Array instead of leaving them in a FileList, then using XHR2, you push the files to a FormData object. Example below.

Node.prototype.replaceWith = function(node)
{
    this.parentNode.replaceChild(node, this);
};
if(window.File && window.FileList)
{
    var topicForm = document.getElementById("yourForm");
    topicForm.fileZone = document.getElementById("fileDropZoneElement");
    topicForm.fileZone.files = new Array();
    topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow = document.createElement("input");
    topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.setAttribute("type", "file");
    topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.setAttribute("multiple", "multiple");
    topicForm.onsubmit = function(event)
    {
        var request = new XMLHttpRequest();
        if(request.upload)
        {
            event.preventDefault();
            topicForm.ajax.value = "true";
            request.upload.onprogress = function(event)
            {
                var progress = event.loaded.toString() + " bytes transfered.";
                if(event.lengthComputable)
                progress = Math.round(event.loaded / event.total * 100).toString() + "%";
                topicForm.fileZone.innerHTML = progress.toString();
            };
            request.onload = function(event)
            {
                response = JSON.parse(request.responseText);
                // Handle the response here.
            };
            request.open(topicForm.method, topicForm.getAttribute("action"), true);
            var data = new FormData(topicForm);
            for(var i = 0, file; file = topicForm.fileZone.files[i]; i++)
                data.append("file" + i.toString(), file);
            request.send(data);
        }
    };
    topicForm.fileZone.firstChild.replaceWith(document.createTextNode("Drop files or click here."));
    var handleFiles = function(files)
    {
        for(var i = 0, file; file = files[i]; i++)
            topicForm.fileZone.files.push(file);
    };
    topicForm.fileZone.ondrop = function(event)
    {
        event.stopPropagation();
        event.preventDefault();
        handleFiles(event.dataTransfer.files);
    };
    topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.onchange = function(event)
    {
        handleFiles(topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.files);
    };
    topicForm.fileZone.ondragover = function(event)
    {
        event.stopPropagation();
        event.preventDefault();
    };
    topicForm.fileZone.onclick = function()
    {
        topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.focus();
        topicForm.fileZone.inputWindow.click();
    };
}
else
    topicForm.fileZone.firstChild.replaceWith(document.createTextNode("It's time to update your browser."));
Joshua W
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10

I have found very quick & short workaround for this. Tested in many popular browsers (Chrome, Firefox, Safari);

First, you have to convert FileList to an Array

var newFileList = Array.from(event.target.files);

to delete the particular element use this

newFileList.splice(index,1);
MeVimalkumar
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    You created new variable from `event.target.files` which is not linked to input so it can't change anything except your local variable.. – Maksims Kitajevs Feb 05 '19 at 15:27
6

I know this is an old question but it's ranking high on search engines in regards to this issue.

properties in the FileList object cannot be deleted but at least on Firefox they can be changed. My workaround this issue was to add a property IsValid=true to those files that passed check and IsValid=false to those that didn't.

then I just loop through the list to make sure that only the properties with IsValid=true are added to FormData.

A. Richards
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3

Thanks @Nicholas Anderson simple and straight , here is your code applied and working at my code using jquery.

HTML .

<input class="rangelog btn border-aero" id="file_fr" name="file_fr[]" multiple type="file" placeholder="{$labels_helpfiles_placeholder_file}">
<span style="cursor: pointer; cursor: hand;" onclick="cleanInputs($('#file_fr'))"><i class="fa fa-trash"></i> Empty chosen files</span>

JS CODE

   function cleanInputs(fileEle){
    $(fileEle).val("");
    var parEle = $(fileEle).parent();
    var newEle = $(fileEle).clone()
    $(fileEle).remove();
    $(parEle).prepend(newEle);
}
Sultanos
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2

This is extemporary, but I had the same problem which I solved this way. In my case I was uploading the files via XMLHttp request, so I was able to post the FileList cloned data through formdata appending. Functionality is that you can drag and drop or select multiple files as many times as you want (selecting files again won't reset the cloned FileList), remove any file you want from the (cloned) file list, and submit via xmlhttprequest whatever was left there. This is what I did. It is my first post here so code is a little messy. Sorry. Ah, and I had to use jQuery instead of $ as it was in Joomla script.

// some global variables
var clon = {};  // will be my FileList clone
var removedkeys = 0; // removed keys counter for later processing the request
var NextId = 0; // counter to add entries to the clone and not replace existing ones

jQuery(document).ready(function(){
    jQuery("#form input").change(function () {

    // making the clone
    var curFiles = this.files;
    // temporary object clone before copying info to the clone
    var temparr = jQuery.extend(true, {}, curFiles);
    // delete unnecessary FileList keys that were cloned
    delete temparr["length"];
    delete temparr["item"];

    if (Object.keys(clon).length === 0){
       jQuery.extend(true, clon, temparr);
    }else{
       var keysArr = Object.keys(clon);
       NextId = Math.max.apply(null, keysArr)+1; // FileList keys are numbers
       if (NextId < curFiles.length){ // a bug I found and had to solve for not replacing my temparr keys...
          NextId = curFiles.length;
       }
       for (var key in temparr) { // I have to rename new entries for not overwriting existing keys in clon
          if (temparr.hasOwnProperty(key)) {
             temparr[NextId] = temparr[key];
             delete temparr[key];
                // meter aca los cambios de id en los html tags con el nuevo NextId
                NextId++;
          }
       } 
       jQuery.extend(true, clon, temparr); // copy new entries to clon
    }

// modifying the html file list display

if (NextId === 0){
    jQuery("#filelist").html("");
    for(var i=0; i<curFiles.length; i++) {
        var f = curFiles[i];
        jQuery("#filelist").append("<p id=\"file"+i+"\" style=\'margin-bottom: 3px!important;\'>" + f.name + "<a style=\"float:right;cursor:pointer;\" onclick=\"BorrarFile("+i+")\">x</a></p>"); // the function BorrarFile will handle file deletion from the clone by file id
    }
}else{
    for(var i=0; i<curFiles.length; i++) {
        var f = curFiles[i];
        jQuery("#filelist").append("<p id=\"file"+(i+NextId-curFiles.length)+"\" style=\'margin-bottom: 3px!important;\'>" + f.name + "<a style=\"float:right;cursor:pointer;\" onclick=\"BorrarFile("+(i+NextId-curFiles.length)+")\">x</a></p>"); // yeap, i+NextId-curFiles.length actually gets it right
    }        
}
// update the total files count wherever you want
jQuery("#form p").text(Object.keys(clon).length + " file(s) selected");
    });
});

function BorrarFile(id){ // handling file deletion from clone
    jQuery("#file"+id).remove(); // remove the html filelist element
    delete clon[id]; // delete the entry
    removedkeys++; // add to removed keys counter
    if (Object.keys(clon).length === 0){
        jQuery("#form p").text(Object.keys(clon).length + " file(s) selected");
        jQuery("#fileToUpload").val(""); // I had to reset the form file input for my form check function before submission. Else it would send even though my clone was empty
    }else{
        jQuery("#form p").text(Object.keys(clon).length + " file(s) selected");
    }
}
// now my form check function

function check(){
    if( document.getElementById("fileToUpload").files.length == 0 ){
        alert("No file selected");
        return false;
    }else{
        var _validFileExtensions = [".pdf", ".PDF"]; // I wanted pdf files
        // retrieve input files
        var arrInputs = clon;

       // validating files
       for (var i = 0; i < Object.keys(arrInputs).length+removedkeys; i++) {
         if (typeof arrInputs[i]!="undefined"){
           var oInput = arrInputs[i];
           if (oInput.type == "application/pdf") {
               var sFileName = oInput.name;
               if (sFileName.length > 0) {
                   var blnValid = false;
                   for (var j = 0; j < _validFileExtensions.length; j++) {
                     var sCurExtension = _validFileExtensions[j];
                     if (sFileName.substr(sFileName.length - sCurExtension.length, sCurExtension.length).toLowerCase() == sCurExtension.toLowerCase()) {
                       blnValid = true;
                       break;
                     }
                   }
                  if (!blnValid) {
                    alert("Sorry, " + sFileName + " is invalid, allowed extensions are: " + _validFileExtensions.join(", "));
                    return false;
                  }
              }
           }else{
           alert("Sorry, " + arrInputs[0].name + " is invalid, allowed extensions are: " + _validFileExtensions.join(" or "));
           return false;
           }
         }
       }

    // proceed with the data appending and submission
    // here some hidden input values i had previously set. Now retrieving them for submission. My form wasn't actually even a form...
    var fecha = jQuery("#fecha").val();
    var vendor = jQuery("#vendor").val();
    var sku = jQuery("#sku").val();
    // create the formdata object
    var formData = new FormData();
    formData.append("fecha", fecha);
    formData.append("vendor", encodeURI(vendor));
    formData.append("sku", sku);
    // now appending the clone file data (finally!)
    var fila = clon; // i just did this because I had already written the following using the "fila" object, so I copy my clone again
    // the interesting part. As entries in my clone object aren't consecutive numbers I cannot iterate normally, so I came up with the following idea
    for (i = 0; i < Object.keys(fila).length+removedkeys; i++) { 
        if(typeof fila[i]!="undefined"){
            formData.append("fileToUpload[]", fila[i]); // VERY IMPORTANT the formdata key for the files HAS to be an array. It will be later retrieved as $_FILES['fileToUpload']['temp_name'][i]
        }
    }
    jQuery("#submitbtn").fadeOut("slow"); // remove the upload btn so it can't be used again
    jQuery("#drag").html(""); // clearing the output message element
    // start the request
    var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
    xhttp.addEventListener("progress", function(e) {
            var done = e.position || e.loaded, total = e.totalSize || e.total;
        }, false);
        if ( xhttp.upload ) {
            xhttp.upload.onprogress = function(e) {
                var done = e.position || e.loaded, total = e.totalSize || e.total;
                var percent = done / total;
                jQuery("#drag").html(Math.round(percent * 100) + "%");
            };
        }
      xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
        if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {
         var respuesta = this.responseText;
         jQuery("#drag").html(respuesta);
        }
      };
      xhttp.open("POST", "your_upload_handler.php", true);  
      xhttp.send(formData);
    return true;
    }
};

Now the html and styles for this. I'm quite a newbie but all this actually worked for me and took me a while to figure it out.

<div id="form" class="formpos">
<!--    Select the pdf to upload:-->
  <input type="file" name="fileToUpload[]" id="fileToUpload" accept="application/pdf" multiple>
  <div><p id="drag">Drop your files here or click to select them</p>
  </div>
  <button id="submitbtn" onclick="return check()" >Upload</button>
// these inputs are passed with different names on the formdata. Be aware of that
// I was echoing this, so that's why I use the single quote for php variables
  <input type="hidden" id="fecha" name="fecha_copy" value="'.$fecha.'" />
  <input type="hidden" id="vendor" name="vendorname" value="'.$vendor.'" />
  <input type="hidden" id="sku" name="sku" value="'.$sku.'"" />
</div>
<h1 style="width: 500px!important;margin:20px auto 0px!important;font-size:24px!important;">File list:</h1>
<div id="filelist" style="width: 500px!important;margin:10px auto 0px!important;">Nothing selected yet</div>

The styles for that. I had to mark some of them !important to override Joomla behavior.

.formpos{
  width: 500px;
  height: 200px;
  border: 4px dashed #999;
  margin: 30px auto 100px;
 }
.formpos  p{
  text-align: center!important;
  padding: 80px 30px 0px;
  color: #000;
}
.formpos  div{
  width: 100%!important;
  height: 100%!important;
  text-align: center!important;
  margin-bottom: 30px!important;
}
.formpos input{
  position: absolute!important;
  margin: 0!important;
  padding: 0!important;
  width: 500px!important;
  height: 200px!important;
  outline: none!important;
  opacity: 0!important;
}
.formpos button{
  margin: 0;
  color: #fff;
  background: #16a085;
  border: none;
  width: 508px;
  height: 35px;
  margin-left: -4px;
  border-radius: 4px;
  transition: all .2s ease;
  outline: none;
}
.formpos button:hover{
  background: #149174;
  color: #0C5645;
}
.formpos button:active{
  border:0;
}

I hope this helps.

Eric
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1

There might be a more elegant way to do this but here is my solution. With Jquery

fileEle.value = "";
var parEle = $(fileEle).parent();
var newEle = $(fileEle).clone()
$(fileEle).remove();
parEle.append(newEle);

Basically you cleat the value of the input. Clone it and put the clone in place of the old one.

0

If you have the luck to be sending a post request to the database with the files and you have the files you want to send in your DOM

you can simply check if the file in the file list is present in your DOM, and of course if it's not you just don't send that element to de DB.

Neku80
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0

I realize this is a pretty old question, however I am using an html multiple file selection upload to queue any number of files which can be selectively removed in a custom UI before submitting.

Save files in a variable like this:

let uploadedFiles = [];

//inside DOM file select "onChange" event
let selected = e.target.files[0] ? e.target.files : [];
uploadedFiles = [...uploadedFiles , ...selected ];
createElements();

Create UI with "remove a file":

function createElements(){
  uploadedFiles.forEach((f,i) => {

    //remove DOM elements and re-create them here
    /* //you can show an image like this:
    *  let reader = new FileReader();
    *  reader.onload = function (e) {
    *    let url = e.target.result;
    *    // create <img src=url />
    *  };
    *  reader.readAsDataURL(f);
    */

    element.addEventListener("click", function () {
      uploadedFiles.splice(i, 1);
      createElements();
    });

  }
}

Submit to server:

let fd = new FormData();
uploadedFiles.forEach((f, i) => {
  fd.append("files[]", f);
});
fetch("yourEndpoint", { 
  method: "POST", 
  body: fd, 
  headers: { 
    //do not set Content-Type 
  } 
}).then(...)
0

I mix the solutions of many developers and reach to this solution. It change the original array list after deletion which means if we want to save the images then we can do so.

<script>
    var images = [];
      function image_select() {
          var image = document.getElementById('image').files;
          for (i = 0; i < image.length; i++) {
            images.push({
                "name" : image[i].name,
                "url" : URL.createObjectURL(image[i]),
                "file" : image[i],
            })
          }
          document.getElementById('container').innerHTML = image_show();
      }

      function image_show() {
          var image = "";
          images.forEach((i) => {
             image += `<div class="image_container d-flex justify-content-center position-relative">
                  <img src="`+ i.url +`" alt="Image">
                  <span class="position-absolute" onclick="delete_image(`+ images.indexOf(i) +`)">&times;</span>
              </div>`;
          })
          return image;
      }
      function delete_image(e) {
        images.splice(e, 1);
        document.getElementById('container').innerHTML = image_show();

        const dt = new DataTransfer()
        const input = document.getElementById('image')
        const { files } = input

        for (let i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
            const file = files[i]
            if (e !== i)
            dt.items.add(file);
        }

        input.files = dt.files;
        console.log(document.getElementById('image').files);
      }
</script>

*******This is html code ******

<body>
    <div class="container mt-3 w-100">
        <div class="card shadow-sm w-100">
            <div class="card-header d-flex justify-content-between">
                <h4>Preview Multiple Images</h4>
                <form class="form" action="{{route('store')}}" method="post" id="form" enctype="multipart/form-data">
                    @csrf
                    <input type="file" name="image[]" id="image" multiple onchange="image_select()">
                    <button class="btn btn-sm btn-primary" type="submit">Submit</button>
                </form>
            </div>
            <div class="card-body d-flex flex-wrap justify-content-start" id="container">

            </div>
        </div>
    </div>
</body>

******* This is CSS code ********

<style>
        .image_container {
    height: 120px;
    width: 200px;
    border-radius: 6px;
    overflow: hidden;
    margin: 10px;
}
.image_container img {
    height: 100%;
    width: auto;
    object-fit: cover;
}
.image_container span {
    top: -6px;
    right: 8px;
    color: red;
    font-size: 28px;
    font-weight: normal;
    cursor: pointer;
}
    </style>
aakash rajput
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0

I am using TypeScript and it complained at every steps because of strong type checking. The following code worked for me in Svelte. It has nothing to do with Svelte. So it should work with all libraries/frameworks using TS.

const ele = document.getElementById('file-upload') as HTMLInputElement;
if (ele) {
    ele.value = "";
}
Muhammad Shahbaz
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-1

You may wish to create an array and use that instead of the read-only filelist.

var myReadWriteList = new Array();
// user selects files later...
// then as soon as convenient... 
myReadWriteList = FileListReadOnly;

After that point do your uploading against your list instead of the built in list. I am not sure of the context you are working in but I am working with a jquery plugin I found and what I had to do was take the plugin's source and put it in the page using <script> tags. Then above the source I added my array so that it can act as a global variable and the plugin could reference it.

Then it was just a matter of swapping out the references.

I think this would allow you to also add drag & drop as again, if the built in list is read-only then how else could you get the dropped files into the list?

:))

LPL
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    I wrote too soon.... it appears that the moment one sets a var to equal the filelist the readonly issue comes back .... Thus what I have elected to do is two fold & slightly painful but effective ... I keep a visibile list of files for upload and from here the user can remove... obviously removing an
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      tag is straightforward... so the only method I have come up with is to keep a secondary list of removed files and refer to it during the upload process... therefore if the file is in the upload list I just skip it and the user is none the wiser.
  • – cary abramoff Mar 23 '11 at 21:01
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    When you assign the `FileList` object to the `myReadWriteList` variable, it changes its type from `Array` to `FileList`, so this is not a solution. – adlr0 Aug 26 '16 at 09:01