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HTML onseeking Event Attribute

❮ HTML Event Attributes

Example

When the user starts moving/skipping to a new position in the video, alert some text:

<script>
function myFunction() {
  alert('Seek operation began');
}
</script>

<video onseeking="myFunction()">
Try it Yourself »

More "Try it Yourself" examples below.


Definition and Usage

The seeking event occurs when the user starts moving/skipping to a new position in the audio/video.

Tip: The seeking event is the opposite of the seeked event.

Tip: Use the currentTime property of the Audio/Video Object to get the current playback position.


Browser Support

The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the event.

Event
seeking Yes 9.0 Yes Yes Yes

Syntax

<element onseeking="script">

Attribute Values

Value Description
script The script to be run at the beginning of a time-line change

Technical Details

Supported HTML tags: <audio> and <video>

More Examples

Example

This example demonstrates the difference between the seeking event and seeked event:

<video onseeking="myFunction()" onseeked="mySecondFunction()">
Try it Yourself »

Example

Using the currentTime property of the Video Object to display the current playtime position when the user starts to skip to a new position:

// Get the <video> element with id="myVideo"
let vid = document.getElementById("myVideo");

// Attach a seeking event to the <video>, and execute a function if a seek operation begins
vid.addEventListener("seeking", myFunction);

function myFunction() {
// Display the current position of the <video> in a p element with id="demo"
    document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = vid.currentTime;
}
Try it Yourself »

Example

When the user starts moving/skipping to a new position in the audio, alert some text:

<script>
function myFunction() {
  alert('Seek operation began');
}
</script>

<audio onseeking="myFunction()">
Try it Yourself »

❮ HTML Event Attributes

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