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Summary
The HTML <source>
element specifies multiple media resources for either the <picture>
, the <audio>
or the <video>
element. It is an empty element. It is commonly used to serve the same media content in multiple formats supported by different browsers.
Usage Context |
A media element (<audio> or <video> , and it should be placed before any flow content or <track> element. |
---|---|
Permitted parent elements | A <picture> element, and it should be placed before the <img> element. |
Content categories | None. |
Permitted content | None, it is an empty element. |
Tag omission | It must have start tag, but must not have an end tag. |
DOM interface | HTMLSourceElement |
Attributes
This element includes the global attributes.
sizes
- Is a list of source sizes that describes the final rendered width of the image represented by the source. Each source size consists of a comma-separated list of media condition-length pairs. This information is used by the browser to determine, before laying the page out, which image defined in
srcset
to use.
Thesizes
attribute has an effect only when the<source>
element is the direct child of a<picture>
element. src
- Required for
<audio>
and<video>
, address of the media resource. The value of this attribute is ignored when the<source>
element is placed inside a<picture>
element. srcset
- A list of one or more strings separated by commas indicating a set of possible images represented by the source for the browser to use. Each string is composed of:
- one URL to an image,
- a width descriptor, that is a positive integer directly followed by
'w'
. The default value, if missing, is the infinity. - a pixel density descriptor, that is a positive floating number directly followed by
'x'
. The default value, if missing, is1x
.
Each string in the list must have at least a width descriptor or a pixel density descriptor to be valid. Among the list, there must be only one string containing the same tuple of width descriptor and pixel density descriptor.
The browser chooses the most adequate image to display at a given point of time.
Thesrcset
attribute has an effect only when the<source>
element is the direct child of a<picture>
element. type
- The MIME-type of the resource, optionally with a
codecs
parameter. See RFC 4281 for information about how to specify codecs. media
- Media query of the resource's intended media; this should be used only in a
<picture>
element.
If the type attribute isn't specified, the media's type is retrieved from the server and checked to see if Gecko can handle it; if it can't be rendered, the next source is checked. If the type attribute is specified, it's compared against the types Gecko can play, and if it's not recognized, the server doesn't even get queried; instead, the next source element is checked at once.
Examples
This example demonstrates how to offer a video in Ogg format for users whose browsers support Ogg format, and a QuickTime format video for users whose browsers support that. If the audio
or video
element is not supported by the browser, a notice is displayed instead. If the browser supports the element but does not support any of the specified formats, an error
event is raised and the default media controls (if enabled) will indicate an error. See also the list of media formats supported by the audio and video elements in various browsers.
<video controls> <source src="foo.webm" type="video/webm"> <source src="foo.ogg" type="video/ogg"> <source src="foo.mov" type="video/quicktime"> I'm sorry; your browser doesn't support HTML5 video. </video>
For more examples, see Using audio and video in Firefox.
Specifications
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
WHATWG HTML Living Standard The definition of '<source>' in that specification. |
Living Standard | Initial definition of <source> used inside a <picture> element. |
WHATWG HTML Living Standard The definition of '<source>' in that specification. |
Living Standard | Initial definition of <source> used inside a media element, <audio> or <video> . |
Browser compatibility
Feature | Chrome | Firefox (Gecko) | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | (Yes) | 3.5 (1.9.1) | 9.0 | (Yes) | (Yes) |
media attribute |
(Yes) | 15.0 (15.0) | 9.0 | (Yes) | (Yes) |
sizes attribute |
? | 33 (33)[1] | ? | ? | ? |
srcset attribute |
? | 33 (33)[1] | ? | ? | ? |
Feature | Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | IE Mobile | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support | (Yes) | 1.0 (1.0) | ? | ? | ? |
media attribute |
(Yes) | 15.0 (15.0) | ? | ? | ? |
sizes attribute |
? | 33.0 (33)[1] | ? | ? | ? |
srcset attribute |
? | 33.0 (33)[1] | ? | ? | ? |
[1] This feature is behind the dom.image.picture.enabled
preference, defaulting to false
.
Currently, only a small subset of the functionality is implemented — Gecko picks the first source element that has a type matching the MIME-type of a supported media format; see bug 449363 for details.
See also
<picture>
element