HTMLMediaElement: durationchange event - Web APIs | MDN (original) (raw)
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.
The durationchange event is fired when the duration attribute has been updated.
Syntax
Use the event name in methods like addEventListener(), or set an event handler property.
js
addEventListener("durationchange", (event) => { })
ondurationchange = (event) => { }
Event type
A generic Event.
Examples
These examples add an event listener for the HTMLMediaElement's durationchange event, then post a message when that event handler has reacted to the event firing.
Using addEventListener():
js
const video = document.querySelector("video");
video.addEventListener("durationchange", (event) => {
console.log("Not sure why, but the duration of the video has changed.");
});
Using the ondurationchange event handler property:
js
const video = document.querySelector("video");
video.ondurationchange = (event) => {
console.log("Not sure why, but the duration of the video has changed.");
};
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| HTML # event-media-durationchange |
| HTML # handler-ondurationchange |
Browser compatibility
- The HTMLMediaElement playing event
- The HTMLMediaElement waiting event
- The HTMLMediaElement seeking event
- The HTMLMediaElement seeked event
- The HTMLMediaElement ended event
- The HTMLMediaElement loadedmetadata event
- The HTMLMediaElement loadeddata event
- The HTMLMediaElement canplay event
- The HTMLMediaElement canplaythrough event
- The HTMLMediaElement timeupdate event
- The HTMLMediaElement play event
- The HTMLMediaElement pause event
- The HTMLMediaElement ratechange event
- The HTMLMediaElement volumechange event
- The HTMLMediaElement suspend event
- The HTMLMediaElement emptied event
- The HTMLMediaElement stalled event