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Polyfill that enables HTML5 drag drop support on mobile (touch) devices.

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DragDropTouch

Polyfill that enables HTML5 drag drop support on mobile (touch) devices.

The HTML5 specification includes support for drag and drop operations. Unfortunately, this specification is based on mouse events, rather than pointer events, and so most mobile browsers do not implement it. As such, applications that rely on HTML5 drag and drop have reduced functionality when running on mobile devices.

The DragDropTouch class is a polyfill that translates touch events into standard HTML5 drag drop events. If you add the polyfill to your pages, drag and drop operations should work on mobile devices just like they do on the desktop.

Demo

This demo should work on desktop as well as on mobile devices, including iPads and Android tablets. To test this on a desktop, turn on "responsive design mode", which is both a button in the browser developer tools, as well as the hot-key ctrl-shift-M on Windows and Linux, or cmd-shift-M on Mac.

How to "install"

Add the drag-drop-touch.esm.js or drag-drop-touch.esm.min.js polyfill script to your page to enable drag and drop on devices with touch input:

<script src="drag-drop-touch.esm.min.js?autoload" type="module"></script>

Note the ?autoload query argument on the src URL: this loads the polyfill and immediately enables it so that you do not need to write any code yourself. If omitted, the library will instead set up a window.DragDropTouch object with a single function, DragDropTouch.enable(dragRoot, dropRoot, options). All three arguments are optional. If left off, DragDropTouch.enable() simply polyfills the entire page. If you only want the polyfill to apply to specific elements though, you can call the enable function once for each set of elements that need polyfilling.

Also note the type="module", which is required. If left off, you'll probably get a browser error similar to:

Uncaught SyntaxError: import.meta may only appear in a module

Using a CDN url

<script
  src="https://drag-drop-touch-js.github.io/dragdroptouch/dist/drag-drop-touch.esm.min.js"
  type="module"
></script>

Using a JS ESM import

As an ES module, you can also use this polyfill as an import in other scripts:

import { enableDragDropTouch } from "./drag-drop-touch.esm.min.js";

// Set up the default full page polyfill:
enableDragDropTouch();

// Or, explicitly polyfill only certain elements
enableDragDropTouch(dragRootElement, dropRootElement);

// Or even explicitly polyfill only certain elements with non-default behaviour
const options = {
  // ...
};
enableDragDropTouch(dragRootElement, dropRootElement, options);

Polyfill behaviour

The DragDropTouch polyfill attaches listeners to the document's touch events:

  • On touchstart, it checks whether the target element has the draggable attribute or is contained in an element that does. If that is the case, it saves a reference to the "drag source" element and prevents the default handling of the event.
  • On touchmove, it checks whether the touch has moved a certain threshold distance from the origin. If that is the case, it raises the dragstart event and continues monitoring moves to fire dragenter and dragleave.
  • On touchend, it raises the dragend and drop events.

To avoid interfering with the automatic browser translation of some touch events into mouse events, the polyfill performs a few additional tasks:

  • Raise the mousemove, mousedown, mouseup, and click events when the user touches a draggable element but doesn't start dragging,
  • Raise the dblclick event when there's a new touchstart right after a click, and
  • Raise the contextmenu event when the touch lasts a while but the user doesn't start dragging the element.

Overriding polyfill behaviour

The following options can be passed into the enabling function to change how the polyfill works:

  • allowDragScroll is a flag that determines whether to allow scrolling when a drag reaches the edges of the screen. This can be either true or false, and is true by default.
  • contextMenuDelayMS is the number of milliseconds we'll wait before the polyfill triggers a context menu event on long press. This value is 900 by default.
  • dragImageOpacity determines how see-through the "drag placeholder", that's attached to the cursor while dragging, should be. This value is a number in the interval [0, 1], where 0 means fully transparent, and 1 means fully opaque. This value is 0.5 by default.
  • dragScrollPercentage is the size of the "hot region" at the edge of the screen as a percentage value on which scrolling will be allowed, if the allowDragScroll flag is true (which is its default value). This value is 10 by default.
  • dragScrollSpeed is the number of pixels to scroll if a drag event occurs within a scrolling hot region. This value is 10 by default.
  • dragThresholdPixels is the number of pixels that a touchmove needs to actually move before the polyfill switches to drag mode rather than click mode. This value is 5 by default
  • isPressHoldMode is a flag that tells the polyfill whether a a long-press is required before polyfilling drag events. This value can be either true or false, and is false by default.
  • forceListen is a flag that determines whether the polyfill should be enabled irrespective of whether the browser indicates that it's running on a touch-enabled device or not. This value is true by default.
  • pressHoldDelayMS: is the number of milliseconds the polyfill will wait before it considers an active press to be a "long press". This value is 400 by default.
  • pressHoldMargin is the number of pixels we allow a touch event to drift over the course of a long press start. This value is 25 by default.
  • pressHoldThresholdPixels is the drift in pixels that determines whether a long press actually starts a long press, or starts a touch-drag instead. This value is 0 by default.

Thanks

  • Thanks to Eric Bidelman for the great tutorial on HTML5 drag and drop: Native HTML5 Drag and Drop.
  • Thanks also to Chris Wilson and Paul Kinlan for their article on mouse and touch events: Touch And Mouse.
  • Thanks to Tim Ruffles for his iOS shim code which was inspiring: iOS DragDrop Shim.

License

MIT License

For developers

If you wish to work on this library, fork and clone the repository, then run npm install to install all the dependency, followed by a one-time npm run dev:setup, which will install the necessary components for running the integration tests.

Running tests

This repository uses the standard npm test command to run build and integration tests. Build testing consists of linting the source code using tsc, auto-formatting it using prettier, and compiling it into three bundles (debug, normal, and minified) using esbuild. Integration tests are found in the tests/touch.spec.js file, using Playwright as test runner.

Manual testing

To manually test in the browser, you can run npm start and then open the URL that is printed to the console once the initial build tasks have finished. This runs a local server that lets you run the demo page, but with the drag-drop-touch.esm.min.js replaced by a drag-drop-touch.debug.esm.js instead, which preserves all debug statements used in the TypeScript source.

To add your own debug statements, use the DEBUG: label followed by either a normal statement, or multiple statements wrapped in a new block.