HTML ondragend Event Attribute
Example
Execute a JavaScript when the user has finished dragging a <p> element:
<p draggable="true" ondragend="myFunction(event)">Drag me!</p>
Try it yourself »
Definition and Usage
The ondragend attribute fires when the user has finished dragging an element or text selection.
Drag and drop is a very common feature in HTML5. It is when you "grab" an object and drag it to a different location. For more information, see our HTML Tutorial on HTML5 Drag and Drop.
Note: To make an element draggable, use the global HTML5 draggable attribute.
Tip: Links and images are draggable by default, and do not need the draggable attribute.
There are many event attributes that are used, and can occur, in the different stages of a drag and drop operation:
- Events fired on the draggable target (the source element):
- ondragstart - fires when the user starts to drag an element
- ondrag - fires when an element is being dragged
- ondragend - fires when the user has finished dragging the element
- Events fired on the drop target:
- ondragenter - fires when the dragged element enters the drop target
- ondragover - fires when the dragged element is over the drop target
- ondragleave - fires when the dragged element leaves the drop target
- ondrop - fires when the dragged element is dropped on the drop target
Browser Support
The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the event attribute.
Event Attribute | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ondragend | 4.0 | 9.0 | 3.5 | 6.0 | 12.0 |
Differences Between HTML 4.01 and HTML5
The ondragend attribute is new in HTML5.
Syntax
<element ondragend="script">
Attribute Values
Value | Description |
---|---|
script | The script to be run on ondragend |
Technical Details
Supported HTML tags: | ALL HTML elements |
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Related Pages
HTML Tutorial: HTML5 Drag and Drop
HTML Reference: HTML draggable Attribute
HTML DOM Reference: ondragend Event
HTML Event Attributes