Full-screen can be activated for the whole browser window by pressing the F11 key. It can be exited by pressing the Esc button.
Tap the video you'd like to watch. At the bottom of the video player, tap full screen .
HTML 5 provides no way to make a video fullscreen, but the parallel Fullscreen API defines an API for elements to display themselves fullscreen.
This can be applied to any element, including videos.
Browser support is good, but Internet Explorer and Safari need prefixed versions.
An external demo is provided as Stack Snippet sandboxing rules break it.
<div id="one">
One
</div>
<div id="two">
Two
</div>
<button>one</button>
<button>two</button>
div {
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
}
#one { background: yellow; }
#two { background: pink; }
addEventListener("click", event => {
const btn = event.target;
if (btn.tagName.toLowerCase() !== "button") return;
const id = btn.textContent;
const div = document.getElementById(id);
if (div.requestFullscreen)
div.requestFullscreen();
else if (div.webkitRequestFullscreen)
div.webkitRequestFullscreen();
else if (div.msRequestFullScreen)
div.msRequestFullScreen();
});
HTML 5 provides no way to make a video fullscreen, but the parallel Fullscreen specification supplies the requestFullScreen
method which allows arbitrary elements (including <video>
elements) to be made fullscreen.
It has experimental support in a number of browsers.
Note: this has since been removed from the specification.
From the HTML5 spec (at the time of writing: June '09):
User agents should not provide a public API to cause videos to be shown full-screen. A script, combined with a carefully crafted video file, could trick the user into thinking a system-modal dialog had been shown, and prompt the user for a password. There is also the danger of "mere" annoyance, with pages launching full-screen videos when links are clicked or pages navigated. Instead, user-agent specific interface features may be provided to easily allow the user to obtain a full-screen playback mode.
Browsers may provide a user interface, but shouldn't provide a programmable one.
Most of the answers here are outdated.
It's now possible to bring any element into fullscreen using the Fullscreen API, although it's still quite a mess because you can't just call div.requestFullScreen()
in all browsers, but have to use browser specific prefixed methods.
I've created a simple wrapper screenfull.js that makes it easier to use the Fullscreen API.
Current browser support is:
Note that many mobile browsers don't seem to support a full screen option yet.
Safari supports it through webkitEnterFullscreen
.
Chrome should support it since it's WebKit also, but errors out.
Chris Blizzard of Firefox said they're coming out with their own version of fullscreen which will allow any element to go to fullscreen. e.g. Canvas
Philip Jagenstedt of Opera says they'll support it in a later release.
Yes, the HTML5 video spec says not to support fullscreen, but since users want it, and every browser is going to support it, the spec will change.
webkitEnterFullScreen();
This needs to be called on the video tag element, for example, to fullscreen the first video tag on the page use:
document.getElementsByTagName('video')[0].webkitEnterFullscreen();
Notice: this is outdated answer and no longer relevant.
Many modern web browsers have implemented a FullScreen API that allows you to give full screen focus to certain HTML elements. This is really great for displaying interactive media like videos in a fully immersive environment.
To get the full screen button working you need to set up another event listener that will call the requestFullScreen()
function when the button is clicked. To ensure that this will work across all supported browsers you are also going to need to check to see if the requestFullScreen()
is available and fallback to the vendor prefixed versions (mozRequestFullScreen
and webkitRequestFullscreen
) if it is not.
var elem = document.getElementById("myvideo");
if (elem.requestFullscreen) {
elem.requestFullscreen();
} else if (elem.msRequestFullscreen) {
elem.msRequestFullscreen();
} else if (elem.mozRequestFullScreen) {
elem.mozRequestFullScreen();
} else if (elem.webkitRequestFullscreen) {
elem.webkitRequestFullscreen();
}
Reference:- https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/API/DOM/Using_full_screen_mode Reference:- http://blog.teamtreehouse.com/building-custom-controls-for-html5-videos
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