Ahmed
Ahmed

Reputation: 11423

Inputting a default image in case the src attribute of an html <img> is not valid?

Is there any way to render a default image in an HTML <img> tag, in case the src attribute is invalid (using only HTML)? If not, what would be your lightweight way to work around it?

Upvotes: 368

Views: 512027

Answers (27)

Patrick McElhaney
Patrick McElhaney

Reputation: 59351

You asked for an HTML only solution...

 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
   "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">

<html lang="en">

<head>
  <title>Object Test</title>
  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
</head>

<body>

  <p>
    <object data="https://stackoverflow.com/does-not-exist.png" type="image/png">
      <img src="https://cdn.sstatic.net/Img/unified/sprites.svg?v=e5e58ae7df45" alt="Stack Overflow logo and icons and such">
    </object>
  </p>

</body>

</html>

Since the first image doesn't exist, the fallback (the sprites used on this web site*) will display. And if you're using a really old browser that doesn't support object, it will ignore that tag and use the img tag. See caniuse website for compatibility. This element is widely supported by all browsers from IE6+.

* Unless the URL for the image changed (again), in which case you'll probably see the alt text.

Upvotes: 419

Alex Sorkin
Alex Sorkin

Reputation: 101

I am adding loading="lazy" to <img> tag. In some cases it works.

Upvotes: 0

amit bakle
amit bakle

Reputation: 3429

Found this solution in Spring in Action 3rd Ed.

<img src="../resources/images/Image1.jpg" onerror="this.src='../resources/images/none.jpg'" />

Update: This is not an HTML only solution... onerror is javascript

Upvotes: 99

Andrii Demchenko
Andrii Demchenko

Reputation: 11

HTML Part:

<img [ngStyle]="{'width.px': size}" src="assets/svg/{{code}}.svg"
(error)="handleFlagError($event)">

JS Part:

function handleFlagError($event) {
        $event.target.src = 'assets/svg/base.svg';
      }

Upvotes: -2

hlorand
hlorand

Reputation: 1406

Some CMS use Markdown to store Website content. It is also possible to define a fallback image in Markdown, just use the alt attribute:

![fallback-image.jpg](image-notloading.jpg)

This generates the following HTML output:

<img src="image-notloading.jpg" alt="fallback-image.jpg">

You need a little javascript to make the fallback mechanism work:

<script>
document.querySelectorAll("img").forEach(function(el){
    el.setAttribute("onerror","this.src=this.alt;this.onerror='';");
});
</script>

Upvotes: -1

Rager
Rager

Reputation: 876

Update: 2022 (works on chrome still!!)

I recently had to build a fall back system which included any number of fallback images. Here's how I did it using a simple JavaScript function.

HTML

 <img src="some_image.tiff"
    onerror="fallBackImg(this);"
    data-src-1="some_image.png"
    data-src-2="another_image.jpg">

JavaScript

function fallBackImg(elem){
    elem.error = null;
    let index = elem.dataset.fallIndex || 1;
    elem.src = elem.dataset[`src-${index}`];
    elem.dataset.fallIndex = ++index;
}

I feel like it's a pretty lightweight way of handling many fallback images.

If you want "HTML only" then this

<img src="some_image.tiff"
    onerror="this.error = null;
        let i = this.dataset.i || 1;
        this.src = this.dataset[`src-${i}`];
        this.dataset.i = ++i;"
    data-src-1="some_image.png"
    data-src-2="another_image.jpg">

Upvotes: 9

Coder039
Coder039

Reputation: 71

React

<img
  src="https://example.com/does_not_exist.png"
  onError={(e) => {
    e.currentTarget.src = "https://example.com/default.png"
  }}
/>

Upvotes: 7

Svend
Svend

Reputation: 8158

This works well for me. Maybe you wanna use JQuery to hook the event.

 <img src="foo.jpg" onerror="if (this.src != 'error.jpg') this.src = 'error.jpg';" alt="add alternative text here">

Updated with jacquargs error guard

Updated: CSS only solution I recently saw Vitaly Friedman demo a great CSS solution I wasn't aware of. The idea is to apply the content property to the broken image. Normally :after or :before do not apply to images, but when they're broken, they're applied.

<img src="nothere.jpg" alt="add alternative text here">
<style>
img:before {
    content: ' ';
    display: block;
    position: absolute;
    height: 50px;
    width: 50px;
    background-image: url(ishere.jpg);
}
</style>

Demo: https://jsfiddle.net/uz2gmh2k/2/

As the fiddle shows, the broken image itself is not removed, but this will probably solve the problem for most cases without any JS nor gobs of CSS. If you need to apply different images in different locations, simply differentiate with a class: .my-special-case img:before { ...

Upvotes: 401

Harry
Harry

Reputation: 11

here is a simple Jquery that worked for me

        $(image).on('error', function(event) {
            imgage.attr('src', 'your_image.png');})

Upvotes: 0

robskaar
robskaar

Reputation: 545

3 solutions for this:


Consider following html file:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
   <meta charset="UTF-8">
   <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
   <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
  
   <title>Document</title>
</head>
<body>
   <img id="imageId">
   <script src="setimage.js"></script>
</body>
</html>

Solution one :
reference this block of JS code inside the body tag of your html as
<script src="setimage.js"></script>
and set the src paths, the first is the one if there is an error, the next is the one you hope works first time :)

var img = document.getElementById("imageId")
       img.onerror = () => {
           img.src= "../error.png";
       }
       img.src= "../correct.webp.png";

Solution two:

this solution is almost the same, instead you will call the method, again at the end of your body within a script tag, but would supply the paths there.

function setImageWithFallback(mainImgPath, secondaryImgPath) {
   var img = document.getElementById("imageId")
       img.onerror = () => {
           img.src= mainImgPath;
       }
       img.src= secondaryImgPath;
}

Solution three:
if its just a single image, this would be the simplest :) simply set the onerror at the img tag

<img id="imageId" src="../correct.webp.png" 
onerror="if (this.src != '../error.png') this.src = '../error.png';">

Upvotes: 3

eithed
eithed

Reputation: 4359

An HTML only solution, where the only requirement is that you know the size of the image that you're inserting. Will not work for transparent images, as it uses background-image as a filler.

We can successfully use background-image to link the image that appears if the given image is missing. Then the only problem is the broken icon image - we can remove it by inserting a very big empty character, thus pushing the content outside the display of img.

img {
  background-image: url("http://placehold.it/200x200");
  overflow: hidden;
}

img:before {
  content: " ";
  font-size: 1000px;
}
This image is missing:
<img src="a.jpg" style="width: 200px; height: 200px"/><br/>
And is displaying the placeholder


An CSS only solution (Webkit only)

img:before {
  content: " ";
  font-size: 1000px;
  background-image: url("http://placehold.it/200x200");
  display: block;
  width: 200px;
  height: 200px;
  position: relative;
  z-index: 0;
  margin-bottom: -16px;
}
This image is there:
<img src="http://placehold.it/100x100"/><br/>

This image is missing:
<img src="a.jpg"/><br/>
And is displaying the placeholder

Upvotes: 8

manish kumar
manish kumar

Reputation: 4700

Simple and neat solution involving some good answers and comment.

<img src="foo.jpg" onerror="this.src='error.jpg';this.onerror='';">

It even solve infinite loop risk.

Worked for me.

Upvotes: 23

Yoshita Mahajan
Yoshita Mahajan

Reputation: 463

If you have created dynamic Web project and have placed the required image in WebContent then you can access the image by using below mentioned code in Spring MVC:

<img src="Refresh.png" alt="Refresh" height="50" width="50">

You can also create folder named img and place the image inside the folder img and place that img folder inside WebContent then you can access the image by using below mentioned code:

<img src="img/Refresh.png" alt="Refresh" height="50" width="50">

Upvotes: 0

Seb
Seb

Reputation: 49

The above solution is incomplete, it missed the attribute src.

this.src and this.attribute('src') are NOT the same, the first one contains the full reference to the image, for example http://my.host/error.jpg, but the attribute just keeps the original value, error.jpg

Correct solution

<img src="foo.jpg" onerror="if (this.src != 'error.jpg' && this.attribute('src') != 'error.jpg') this.src = 'error.jpg';" />

Upvotes: 4

sunsay
sunsay

Reputation: 1580

In addition to Patrick's brilliant answer, for those of you who are searching for a cross-platform angular js solution, here you go:

<object type="image/png" data-ng-attr-data="{{ url || 'data:' }}">
    <!-- any html as a fallback -->
</object>

Here's a plunk where I was playing trying to find the right solution: http://plnkr.co/edit/nL6FQ6kMK33NJeW8DVDY?p=preview

Upvotes: 0

suhail
suhail

Reputation: 27

Well!! I found this way convenient , check for the height attribute of image to be 0, then you can overwrite the src attribute with default image: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/HTMLImageElement/Image

 image.setAttribute('src','../icons/<some_image>.png');
  //check the height attribute.. if image is available then by default it will 
  //be 100 else 0
  if(image.height == 0){                                       
       image.setAttribute('src','../icons/default.png');
  }

Upvotes: -2

Rob Evans
Rob Evans

Reputation: 6978

If you are using Angular 1.x you can include a directive that will allow you to fallback to any number of images. The fallback attribute supports a single url, multiple urls inside an array, or an angular expression using scope data:

<img ng-src="myFirstImage.png" fallback="'fallback1.png'" />
<img ng-src="myFirstImage.png" fallback="['fallback1.png', 'fallback2.png']" />
<img ng-src="myFirstImage.png" fallback="myData.arrayOfImagesToFallbackTo" />

Add a new fallback directive to your angular app module:

angular.module('app.services', [])
    .directive('fallback', ['$parse', function ($parse) {
        return {
            restrict: 'A',
            link: function (scope, element, attrs) {
                var errorCount = 0;

                // Hook the image element error event
                angular.element(element).bind('error', function (err) {
                    var expressionFunc = $parse(attrs.fallback),
                        expressionResult,
                        imageUrl;

                    expressionResult = expressionFunc(scope);

                    if (typeof expressionResult === 'string') {
                        // The expression result is a string, use it as a url
                        imageUrl = expressionResult;
                    } else if (typeof expressionResult === 'object' && expressionResult instanceof Array) {
                        // The expression result is an array, grab an item from the array
                        // and use that as the image url
                        imageUrl = expressionResult[errorCount];
                    }

                    // Increment the error count so we can keep track
                    // of how many images we have tried
                    errorCount++;
                    angular.element(element).attr('src', imageUrl);
                });
            }
        };
    }])

Upvotes: 2

bapho
bapho

Reputation: 936

a simple img-element is not very flexible so i combined it with a picture-element. this way no CSS is needed. when an error occurs, all srcset's are set to the fallback version. a broken link image is not showing up. it does not load unneeded image versions. the picture-element supports responsive design and multiple fallbacks for types that are not supported by the browser.

<picture>
    <source id="s1" srcset="image1_not_supported_by_browser.webp" type="image/webp">
    <source id="s2" srcset="image2_broken_link.png" type="image/png">
    <img src="image3_fallback.jpg" alt="" onerror="this.onerror=null;document.getElementById('s1').srcset=document.getElementById('s2').srcset=this.src;">
</picture>

Upvotes: 38

Emiliano Barboza
Emiliano Barboza

Reputation: 485

<img style="background-image: url(image1), url(image2);"></img>                                            

Use background image that let you add multiple images. My case: image1 is the main image, this will get from some place (browser doing a request) image2 is a default local image to show while image1 is being loaded. If image1 returns any kind of error, the user won't see any change and this will be clean for user experience

Upvotes: 14

user3601578
user3601578

Reputation: 1362

angular2:

<img src="{{foo.url}}" onerror="this.src='path/to/altimg.png'">

Upvotes: 9

Kevin Robatel
Kevin Robatel

Reputation: 8386

A modulable version with JQuery, add this at the end of your file:

<script>
    $(function() {
        $('img[data-src-error]').error(function() {
            var o = $(this);
            var errorSrc = o.attr('data-src-error');

            if (o.attr('src') != errorSrc) {
                o.attr('src', errorSrc);
            }
        });
    });
</script>

and on your img tag:

<img src="..." data-src-error="..." />

Upvotes: 6

Xofo
Xofo

Reputation: 1288

There is no way to be sure the myriad number of clients (browsers) that will try to view your page. One aspect to consider is that email clients are defacto web browsers and may not handle such trickamajickery ...

As such you should ALSO include an alt/text with a DEFAULT WIDTH and HEIGHT, like this. This is a pure HTML solution.

alt="NO IMAGE" width="800" height="350"

So the other good answer would be slightly modified as follows:

<img src="foo.jpg" onerror="if (this.src != 'error.jpg') this.src = 'error.jpg';" alt="NO IMAGE" width="800" height="350">

I had issues with the object tag in Chrome, but I would imagine this would apply to that as well.

You can further style the alt/text to be VERY BIG ...

So my answer is use Javascript with a nice alt/text fallback.

I also found this interesting: How to style an image's alt attribute

Upvotes: 4

Obie
Obie

Reputation: 680

If you're using Angular/jQuery then this might help...

<img ng-src="{{item.url}}" altSrc="{{item.alt_url}}" onerror="this.src = $(this).attr('altSrc')">

Explanation

Assuming that item has a property url that might be null, when it is then the image will show up as broken. That triggers execution of onerror attribute expression, as described above. You need to override the src attribute as described above, but you will need jQuery to access your altSrc. Couldn't get it to work with vanilla JavaScript.

Might seem a little hacky but saved the day on my project.

Upvotes: 11

For any image, just use this javascript code:

if (ptImage.naturalWidth == 0)
    ptImage.src = '../../../../icons/blank.png';

where ptImage is a <img> tag address obtained by document.getElementById().

Upvotes: 0

lambacck
lambacck

Reputation: 9926

<style type="text/css">
img {
   background-image: url('/images/default.png')
}
</style>

Be sure to enter dimensions of image and whether you want the image to tile or not.

Upvotes: 17

Pim Jager
Pim Jager

Reputation: 32129

I don't think it is possible using just HTML. However using javascript this should be doable. Bassicly we loop over each image, test if it is complete and if it's naturalWidth is zero then that means that it not found. Here is the code:

fixBrokenImages = function( url ){
    var img = document.getElementsByTagName('img');
    var i=0, l=img.length;
    for(;i<l;i++){
        var t = img[i];
        if(t.naturalWidth === 0){
            //this image is broken
            t.src = url;
        }
    }
}

Use it like this:

 window.onload = function() {
    fixBrokenImages('example.com/image.png');
 }

Tested in Chrome and Firefox

Upvotes: 16

Jon
Jon

Reputation: 6056

Using Jquery you could do something like this:

$(document).ready(function() {
    if ($("img").attr("src") != null)
    {
       if ($("img").attr("src").toString() == "")
       {
            $("img").attr("src", "images/default.jpg");
       }
    }
    else
    {
        $("img").attr("src", "images/default.jpg");
    }
});

Upvotes: -1

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