118

I was studying Blobs, and I noticed that when you have an ArrayBuffer, you can easily convert this to a Blob as follows:

var dataView = new DataView(arrayBuffer);
var blob = new Blob([dataView], { type: mimeString });

The question I have now is, is it possible to go from a Blob to an ArrayBuffer?

ndequeker
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Jeanluca Scaljeri
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    Blobs aren't in native JS format. They're like references to data but not the actual data. Data from a `Blob` cannot be directly read but it could be done with some APIs. – bsound Jun 26 '19 at 01:39

7 Answers7

143

You can use FileReader to read the Blob as an ArrayBuffer.

Here's a short example:

var arrayBuffer;
var fileReader = new FileReader();
fileReader.onload = function(event) {
    arrayBuffer = event.target.result;
};
fileReader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);

Here's a longer example:

// ArrayBuffer -> Blob
var uint8Array  = new Uint8Array([1, 2, 3]);
var arrayBuffer = uint8Array.buffer;
var blob        = new Blob([arrayBuffer]);

// Blob -> ArrayBuffer
var uint8ArrayNew  = null;
var arrayBufferNew = null;
var fileReader     = new FileReader();
fileReader.onload  = function(event) {
    arrayBufferNew = event.target.result;
    uint8ArrayNew  = new Uint8Array(arrayBufferNew);

    // warn if read values are not the same as the original values
    // arrayEqual from: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3115982/how-to-check-javascript-array-equals
    function arrayEqual(a, b) { return !(a<b || b<a); };
    if (arrayBufferNew.byteLength !== arrayBuffer.byteLength) // should be 3
        console.warn("ArrayBuffer byteLength does not match");
    if (arrayEqual(uint8ArrayNew, uint8Array) !== true) // should be [1,2,3]
        console.warn("Uint8Array does not match");
};
fileReader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);
fileReader.result; // also accessible this way once the blob has been read

This was tested out in the console of Chrome 27—69, Firefox 20—60, and Safari 6—11.

Here's also a live demonstration which you can play with: https://jsfiddle.net/potatosalad/FbaM6/

Update 2018-06-23: Thanks to Klaus Klein for the tip about event.target.result versus this.result

Reference:

potatosalad
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    doesn't this seem like a lot of code.. for something that should be simple? – Henley Chiu May 24 '13 at 17:21
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    @HenleyChiu I edited the answer to include a short version of the code. The longer example is intended to be fully self-contained (shows how to create the ArrayBuffer, the Blob, and back again). I haven't been able to find a synchronous way to read a Blob without using a [Web Worker](http://dev.w3.org/html5/workers/) and [FileReaderSync](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FileReaderSync). – potatosalad May 25 '13 at 15:42
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    Some people really want to prove the callback hell exists. It makes sense for LARGE blobs, but for normal use cases JavaScript should provide a sync method. – kungfooman Sep 24 '17 at 04:02
  • this was very usefull – Jimmy Obonyo Abor Nov 20 '17 at 19:14
  • @Anuj You've did wrong. It shouldn't refer to `this`. `.result` should fix that! – bsound Apr 16 '19 at 08:46
  • FYI `await blob.arrayBuffer()` has good support now: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Blob/arrayBuffer#browser_compatibility – Tomáš Hübelbauer Mar 27 '21 at 15:47
47

The Response API consumes a (immutable) Blob from which the data can be retrieved in several ways. The OP only asked for ArrayBuffer, and here's a demonstration of it.

var blob = GetABlobSomehow();

// NOTE: you will need to wrap this up in a async block first.
/* Use the await keyword to wait for the Promise to resolve */
await new Response(blob).arrayBuffer();   //=> <ArrayBuffer>

alternatively you could use this:

new Response(blob).arrayBuffer()
.then(/* <function> */);

Note: This API isn't compatible with older (ancient) browsers so take a look to the Browser Compatibility Table to be on the safe side ;)

bsound
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18

Or you can use the fetch API

fetch(URL.createObjectURL(myBlob)).then(res => res.arrayBuffer())

I don't know what the performance difference is, and this will show up on your network tab in DevTools as well.

Arlen Beiler
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17

Just to complement Mr @potatosalad answer.

You don't actually need to access the function scope to get the result on the onload callback, you can freely do the following on the event parameter:

var arrayBuffer;
var fileReader = new FileReader();
fileReader.onload = function(event) {
    arrayBuffer = event.target.result;
};
fileReader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);

Why this is better? Because then we may use arrow function without losing the context

var fileReader = new FileReader();
fileReader.onload = (event) => {
    this.externalScopeVariable = event.target.result;
};
fileReader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);
Klaus Klein
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6

There is now (Chrome 76+ & FF 69+) a Blob.prototype.arrayBuffer() method which will return a Promise resolving with an ArrayBuffer representing the Blob's data.

(async () => {
  const blob = new Blob(['hello']);
  const buf = await blob.arrayBuffer();
  console.log( buf.byteLength ); // 5
})();
Kaiido
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3

await blob.arrayBuffer() is good.

The problem is when iOS / Safari support is needed.. for that  one would need this:

Blob.prototype.arrayBuffer ??=function(){ return new Response(this).arrayBuffer() }
Pacerier
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  • https://stackoverflow.com/a/51758200/3702797 and all the other fallbacks are already there. – Kaiido Aug 25 '20 at 00:04
  • @Kaiido, See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15341912/how-to-go-from-blob-to-arraybuffer/63568311#comment109377805_60202012. My method is superior and is required until iOS support. (after which the line can simply be removed) – Pacerier Aug 27 '20 at 06:18
  • And a FileReader is still needed in IE. My point is that your answer doesn't offer anything more than what the previous answers gave. If one wants to build a polyfill, all the various ways of doing the same task are already there. – Kaiido Aug 27 '20 at 06:21
  • @Kaiido, IE requirements are rare. ¶ Yep, this is the only answer with the polyfill. – Pacerier Aug 27 '20 at 13:03
1

This is an async method which first checks for the availability of arrayBuffer method. This function is backward compatible and future proof.

async function blobToArrayBuffer(blob) {
    if ('arrayBuffer' in blob) return await blob.arrayBuffer();
    
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        const reader = new FileReader();
        reader.onload = () => resolve(reader.result);
        reader.onerror = () => reject;
        reader.readAsArrayBuffer(blob);
    });
}
Ramtin
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