For a basic approach, you could take a look at the line-height
CSS property and use that in your calculations. Bear in mind that this approach will not account for other inline elements that are larger than that height (e.g. images).
If you want something a bit more advanced, you can get the information about each line using getClientRects()
function. This function returns a collection of TextRectangle objects with width, height and offset for each one.
See this answer here for an example (albeit an unrelated goal) of how getClientRects()
works.
Update, had a bit of time to come back and update this answer with an actual example. It's basic, but you get the idea:
http://jsbin.com/ukaqu3/2
A couple of pointers:
The collection returned by getClientRects is static, it won't update automatically if the containing element's dimensions change. My example works around this by capturing the window's resize event.
For some strange standards-compliance reason that I'm not understanding, the element you call getClientRects on must be an inline element. In the example I have, I use a container div with the text in another div inside with display: inline
.