HTML ondragend Attribute
Definition and Usage
The ondragend attribute fires when the user has finished dragging an element or text selection.
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 elementondrag- fires when an element is being draggedondragend- fires when the user has finished dragging the element
- Events fired on the drop target:
ondragenter- fires when the dragged element enters the drop targetondragover- fires when the dragged element is over the drop targetondragleave- fires when the dragged element leaves the drop targetondrop- fires when the dragged element is dropped on the drop target
Applies to
The ondragend attribute is part of the Event Attributes, and can be used on any HTML elements.
| Elements | Event |
|---|---|
| All HTML elements | ondragend |
Example
P Example
Execute a JavaScript when the user has finished dragging a <p> element:
<p draggable="true" ondragend="myFunction(event)">Drag me!</p>
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 |
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