I’m posting this because (to my surprise) there was no other place I could find that recommended this.
There’s a really easy way to do this, without restricting you to browser-defined input dimensions. Just use the <label>
tag around a hidden file upload button. This allows for even more freedom in styling than the styling allowed via webkit’s built-in styling[1].
The label tag was made for the exact purpose of directing any click events on it to the child inputs[2], so using that, you won’t require any JavaScript to direct the click event to the input button for you anymore. You’d to use something like the following:
label.myLabel input[type="file"] {
position:absolute;
top: -1000px;
}
/***** Example custom styling *****/
.myLabel {
border: 2px solid #AAA;
border-radius: 4px;
padding: 2px 5px;
margin: 2px;
background: #DDD;
display: inline-block;
}
.myLabel:hover {
background: #CCC;
}
.myLabel:active {
background: #CCF;
}
.myLabel :invalid + span {
color: #A44;
}
.myLabel :valid + span {
color: #4A4;
}
<label class="myLabel">
<input type="file" required/>
<span>My Label</span>
</label>
I’ve used a fixed position to hide the input, to make it work even in ancient versions of Internet Explorer (emulated IE8- refused to work on a visibility:hidden
or display:none
file-input). I’ve tested in emulated IE7 and up, and it worked perfectly.
- You can’t use
<button>
s inside<label>
tags unfortunately, so you’ll have to define the styles for the buttons yourself. To me, this is the only downside to this approach. - If the
for
attribute is defined, its value is used to trigger the input with the sameid
as thefor
attribute on the<label>
.