The HTML onprogress event
The HTML onprogress attribute runs JavaScript when the browser is fetching data for a resource. It is an inline handler for the progress event; in modern code prefer addEventListener('progress', …).
Overview
The onprogress event attribute runs JavaScript periodically while a resource loads. In JavaScript the event itself is named progress — drop the on prefix when you call addEventListener.
It is one of the media events, fired by <audio> and <video> elements as their loading and playback state changes. These events drive custom players — progress bars, buffering spinners, play/pause UI.
You can wire this up with the inline onprogress HTML attribute, but the modern, recommended approach is element.addEventListener('progress', handler) in JavaScript. That keeps behavior out of your markup, lets you attach several handlers to the same event, and makes them easy to remove. The inline attribute is fine for quick demos.
Syntax
<element onprogress="handler()">…</element>
element.addEventListener('progress', handler);
Best practices
- Prefer
element.addEventListener('progress', handler)over the inlineonprogressattribute — it separates behavior from markup and allows multiple handlers. - Attach media events to the <video>/<audio> element to build custom player UI.
- Read the element's state (
currentTime,duration,buffered) inside the handler. - Still provide native
controlsand captions for accessibility.
Frequently asked questions
What is the onprogress event?
progress.Which elements fire this event?
How do I build a custom video player?
currentTime and paused on the element to drive your own controls.Should I use the onprogress attribute or addEventListener?
addEventListener('progress', …) in JavaScript. The inline onprogress attribute works but mixes behavior into the markup and allows only one handler per element.