Using javascript, how to get the position of an element
like the title says, how to get the element's x, y positions with respect to their location in the web page and their position开发者_JS百科ing schemes like absolute, relative etc.
In a modern browser, getBoundingClientRect and getClientRects will give you rect objects describing your element. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.getBoundingClientRect and https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.getClientRects
If you have to work with IE8, then you'll have to do different things in different browsers to get correct answers (e.g. object-detect getBoundingClientRect and fall back on some other method if it's not present).
The jQuery offset()
calculation and the Quirksmode findPos
will give incorrect answers in any browser that does subpixel positioning (e.g. Firefox or IE9), because they will round the answer to an integer number of pixels. Depending on what you're doing, that may or may not be ok.
With jQuery:
var $elt = $('select an element however'),
cssPosition = $elt.css('position'),
offset = $elt.offset(),
top = offset.top,
left = offset.left;
Without jQuery, use Quirksmode's findPos
function:
var elt = document.getElementBy...,
pos = findPos(elt),
top = pos[1],
left = pos[0];
Getting the computed CSS position
value without a library is another can of worms. It boils down to:
element.currentStyle
(IE)getComputedStyle(element)
(real browsers)
Check out this
JS:
function findPos(obj) {
var curleft = curtop = 0;
if (obj.offsetParent) {
curleft = obj.offsetLeft
curtop = obj.offsetTop
while (obj = obj.offsetParent) {
curleft += obj.offsetLeft
curtop += obj.offsetTop
}
}
return [curleft,curtop];
}
HTML:
<div id="ser"> TEST</div>
RETURN CALL:
alert(findPos(document.getElementById('ser')));
I hope its help to you
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