In this tutorial, learn how to create a custom file upload input in HTML and style it using CSS. We also use JavaScript to handle file selection and display the selected file name. This is a beginner-friendly guide for those who want to replace the default file input with a more polished and user-friendly design. By the end of this video, you'll know how to style your file input, trigger it programmatically, and display the chosen file name on your website.
In this tutorial, learn how to create a custom file upload input in HTML and style it using CSS. We also use JavaScript to handle file selection and display the selected file name. This is a beginner-friendly guide for those who want to replace the default file input with a more polished and user-friendly design. By the end of this video, you'll know how to style your file input, trigger it programmatically, and display the chosen file name on your website.
You can’t. What you can do, though, is use WhatsApp’s and Telegram’s web platforms to transfer stickers. It’s easy, but might take a while.Open WhatsApp in your browser, find a sticker you like in a chat, and right-click on it to save it as an image. The file won’t be a picture, though—it’s a webpage and will have a .webp extension. Don’t be scared, this is the way. Repeat this step to save as many stickers as you want.Then, open Telegram in your browser and go into your Saved messages chat. Just as you’d share a file with a friend, click the Share file button on the bottom left of the chat window (it looks like a dog-eared paper), and select the .webp files you downloaded. Click Open and you’ll see your stickers in your Saved messages chat. This is now your sticker depository. To use them, forward them as you would a message from one chat to the other: by clicking or long-pressing on the sticker, and then choosing Forward.