For many years the Web is moving towards the parity with the Mobile native applications and adds the missed features. Today browsers have most of them, from the offline mode and enhancements with the Service Workers to Geolocation and NFC.

The one huge ability, which is still missed, but highly used in the mobile applications- the ability to share a page, article or some specific data.

The Web Share API is the first step to fill the gap and bring the native sharing capabilities to the Web.

Why do we need a new API

Previous years there were many tries to deliver some API/agreement for the sharing in the mobile Web applications:

1) Web Intents were introduced and implemented in Chrome 18 but deprecated in Chrome 24

2) There are couple solutions with custom URLs:

3) Mozilla proposed Web Activities but currently, they are obsolete and unsupported.

So the current situation is that there isn’t API to simply share content on the Web. But users need a way to quickly share URL/text/image data into their favorite apps and services easily.

The current abilities are:

Share buttons to the specific services (which resulted in the number of API’s from the services and aggregators to provide just share buttons) Many browsers and applications provide their own specific share buttons.

But again, there isn’t a way to simply share content from the Web application.

The Web Share API

The current Web Share API uses the best practices of non-blocking Promise-based API.

From the data you can share, as for most other share APIs, there are title , url , and text (one of which is required). There is a plan to allow image data and/or file blobs.

Here how it looks:

function onShareClick ( photo ){ // WEB SHARE API navigator . share ({ title : ' Checkout this funny photo ' , text : '' , url : window . location . origin + ' / ' + photo . id }) . then (() => console . log ( ' Successfully shared ' )) . catch (( error ) => console . log ( ' Error sharing: ' , error )); }

image credits

As you see, the API is quite simple and currently expects at least one of the following fields:

title (string): The title of the document being shared (may be ignored by the handler).

(string): The title of the document being shared (may be ignored by the handler). text (string): the text that forms the body of the message being shared.

(string): the text that forms the body of the message being shared. url (string): URL / URI to a resource being shared.

The method returns a Promise. It is resolved if the user chooses a target application, and that application accepts the data without errors.

There may be cases when the Promise is rejected:

invalid data to be shared (for instance, inappropriate fields passed)

the user canceled the picker dialog or there is no app to share the data

the data couldn’t be delivered to the target app

The data to be shared

For all the fields passed to the navigator.share there are many predefined values usually provided on the sites.

For example, there is popular Open Graph Markup. If your site uses it, you can simply reuse the values if you want to share the page data.

I used this approach for the demo:

function getOpenGraphData ( property ){ return document . querySelector ( `meta[property=" ${ property } "]` ) . getAttribute ( ' content ' ); } const sharePage = () => { navigator . share ({ title : getOpenGraphData ( ' og:title ' ), text : getOpenGraphData ( ' og:description ' ), url : getOpenGraphData ( ' og:url ' ) }) //... }

Demo

Here is the video how it works

(tap the share button ➡️ tweet ➡️ check the tweet is added on Twitter):

In the most common case, if you want to add an ability to share the data from any of the pages, but you are not sure if there will be Open Graph or other tags, here is the common pattern:

navigator . share ({ title : document . title , url : document . querySelector ( ' link[rel=canonical] ' ) ? document . querySelector ( ' link[rel=canonical] ' ). href : window . location . href })

Where link[rel=canonical] represent the optional but quite popular <link> element, which represents the URL to be used if the site has e.g. has e.g. a prefixed mobile. URL or other additions in the URL, which shouldn’t be shared.

If the canonical link is not provided, the default URL is shared.

The latest suggestion, don’t remember to disable or fallback the share functionality if it’s not available (browsers without support, devices without share capabilities etc.):

if ( ! navigator . share ){ shareButton . hidden = true ; return ; } // SHARE CODE

Requirements

Currently, the Web share API is available in the stable Chrome on Android.

Here are the steps to make sure the Web Share API work:

The site is served via HTTPS navigator.share() is called via user action (click, tap..)

Conclusion

The Web is moving forward to remove the border between the mobile Web and Native apps, and the Web Share API is the next step to it you can use today.

The future work will be around the implementation of the API to other platforms and adding the ability to provide image data or share files (blob).

Also, there is a discussion for the web apps to receive shares, not just send them. This is called the Web Share Target API and we may hear more from there after a while.

And the list of the useful links in the end: