A JavaScript library for reading EXIF meta data from image files.
You can use it on images in the browser, either from an image or a file input element. Both EXIF and IPTC metadata are retrieved. This package can also be used in AMD or CommonJS environments.
Note: The EXIF standard applies only to .jpg
and .tiff
images. EXIF logic in this package is based on the EXIF standard v2.2 (JEITA CP-3451, included in this repo).
Install exif-js
through NPM:
npm install exif-js --save
Or Bower:
bower install exif-js --save
Then add a script
tag in your an HTML in the best position referencing your local file.
<script src="vendors/exif-js/exif-js"></script>
Note: This repo has no .min.js
. Do your own [minification](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minification_(programming) if you want that.
If you prefer another package manager you will probably manage :D. Or you can clone this GIT repository or download it's ZIP file and extract exif.js
to your project.
The package adds a global EXIF
variable (or AMD or CommonJS equivalent).
Start with calling the EXIF.getData
function. You pass it an image as a parameter:
- either an image from a
<img src="image.jpg">
- OR a user selected image in a
<file type="input">
element on your page.
As a second parameter you specify a callback function. In the callback function you should use this
to access the image with the aforementioned metadata you can then use as you want.
That image now has an extra exifdata
property which is a Javascript object with the EXIF metadata. You can access it's properties to get data like the image caption, the date a photo was taken or it's orientation.
You can get all tages with EXIF.getTag
. Or get a single tag with EXIF.getTag
, where you specify the tag as the second parameter.
The tag names to use are listed in EXIF.Tags
in exif.js
.
Important: Note that you have to wait for the image to be completely loaded, before calling getData
or any other function. It will silently fail otherwise.
You can implement this wait, by running your exif-extracting logic on the window.onLoad
function. Or on an image's own onLoad
function.
For jQuery users please note that you can NOT (reliably) use jQuery's ready
event for this. Because it fires before images are loaded.
You could use
JavaScript:
window.onload=getExif;
function getExif() {
var img1 = document.getElementById("img1");
EXIF.getData(img1, function() {
var make = EXIF.getTag(this, "Make");
var model = EXIF.getTag(this, "Model");
var makeAndModel = document.getElementById("makeAndModel");
makeAndModel.innerHTML = `${make} ${model}`;
});
var img2 = document.getElementById("img2");
EXIF.getData(img2, function() {
var allMetaData = EXIF.getAllTags(this);
var allMetaDataSpan = document.getElementById("allMetaDataSpan");
allMetaDataSpan.innerHTML = JSON.stringify(allMetaData, null, "\t");
});
}
HTML:
<img src="image1.jpg" id="img1" />
<pre>Make and model: <span id="makeAndModel"></span></div>
<br/>
<img src="image2.jpg" id="img2" />
<pre id="allMetaDataSpan"></pre>
<br/>
Note there are also alternate tags, such the EXIF.TiffTags
. See the source code for the full definition and use.
You can also get back a string with all the EXIF information in the image pretty printed by using EXIF.pretty
.
Check the included example/index.html.
Please refer to the source code for more advanced usages such as getting image data from a File/Blob object (EXIF.readFromBinaryFile
).
This is an open source project. Please contribute by forking this repo and issueing a pull request. The project has had notable contributions already, like reading ITPC data. You can also contribute by filing bugs or new features please issue. Or improve the documentation. Please update this README when you do a pull request of proposed changes in base functionality.