17

In a small iframe-application at the Russian social network Ok.ru I use the following call to resize the iframe:

<div id="fb-root"></div> 
<script src="http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/js/fapi.js" 
type="text/javascript"></script> 
<script type="text/javascript"> 
FAPI.init("http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/", "XXX_YYY",
function() {
        alert("clientHeight " + document.getElementById("fb-root").clientHeight);
        alert("offsetHeight " + document.getElementById("fb-root").offsetHeight);
        FAPI.UI.setWindowSize(720, 1200);
}, function(error){
        alert("API initialization failed");
});
</script> 
</body> 
</html>

i.e. the iframe-height is currently hardcoded to 1200.

It works okay, but I'd like to use the height/position of #fb-root element instead.

Does anybody please have an idea, which JavaScript or CSS function could be used here - if I don't want to include jQuery just for one $(#fb-root).offset() call?

I've also looked at their library http://api.odnoklassniki.ru//js/fapi.js but it doesn't include such function.

UPDATE

I've added two alert-calls to my source code above, but they only print

clientHeight 0
offsetHeight 0

UPDATE

The following code seem to work well for my iframe-app now in Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox, regardless of how many
s do I add for testing it. But with Internet Explorer it fails to resize the window and alert shows top=1107 instead of top=1157 in Google Chrome, thus the html table at the bottom is cut off:

preferans

... here my flash game + html table with players ...
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<div id="fb-root"></div>
<script src="http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/js/fapi.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
FAPI.init("http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/", "XXX_YYY",
function() {
        var top = findTop(document.getElementById("fb-root"));
        FAPI.UI.setWindowSize(720, Math.max(top, 1200));
}, function(error){
        alert("API initialization failed");
});
function findTop(obj) {
        if(!obj) return 0;
        return obj.offsetTop + findTop(obj.offsetParent);
}
</script>

</body>
</html>
4
  • 3
    Please don't post urls that 1.) require registration 2.) are in russian... :)) It's rather useless.
    – gblazex
    Jun 2, 2011 at 18:43
  • 1
    What about Facebook questions? There is a lot of them here and they require registration. Jun 4, 2011 at 4:36
  • But everybody is on FB, so it doesn't really require you to register if you wanna help. And it's certainly not in russian(only). :)
    – gblazex
    Jun 4, 2011 at 8:38
  • 3
    It does not matter, if it is a Russian, Hungarian or US social network. I was trying to solve a JavaScript/iframe problem and have supplied enough information at the beginning and later. If you check my other questions here at Stackoverflow, you will see, that I always do that (provide enough information and test cases and responding to every comment when asking anything). Jun 4, 2011 at 11:49

4 Answers 4

27

Looking at the code in jquery, the offset is calculated like this:

function getOffset(element)
{
    if (!element.getClientRects().length)
    {
      return { top: 0, left: 0 };
    }

    let rect = element.getBoundingClientRect();
    let win = element.ownerDocument.defaultView;
    return (
    {
      top: rect.top + win.pageYOffset,
      left: rect.left + win.pageXOffset
    });   
}

1
  • 1
    Thanks, A Lot. It saves My Lot's of time Apr 24, 2020 at 12:40
10
+50

Quirksmode has a JavaScript tutorial/function that shows how to find the coordinates of an element here

Once you have its coordinates, you can use the offsetHeight property of the iframe to read its height.

3
  • This seems like a solid solution, because it traverses the DOM from the element through all its containers, which should work even if the element in question has zero height - as long as some of the containers have height. Any idea explanation why it was voted down? Jun 3, 2011 at 18:40
  • Thank you for the answer, I've updated my question with working code. Any ideas why it fails for MSIE? Jun 4, 2011 at 12:05
  • I would try calling findTop in the window.load event and possibly in a separate button call to see if it gives different information. I've heard before that IE may give incorrect information for the offset properties if its still loading the dom. Another thing to try would be to set position:relative for the "fb-root" div and see if that gives you a different answer. If you do this, also check the margin and padding of the html element.
    – patorjk
    Jun 4, 2011 at 16:55
1

If document.getElementById("fb-root").clientHeight returns 0, it certainly means that your "fb-root" div is either not displayed or still empty.

I have had a look at fapi.js, and it seems that calling the FAPI.init function creates a span which id is "FAPI_Flash_wrap", appends it to the body of the document, then embeds a flash object with id "FAPI_Flash" in this span.

So I would try retrieving an element with id "FAPI_Flash_wrap" or "FAPI_Flash" instead of "fb-root":

<script type="text/javascript">
FAPI.init("http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/", "XXX_YYY",
function() {
    alert("Height = " + document.getElementById("FAPI_Flash_wrap").offsetHeight);
    alert("Width = " + document.getElementById("FAPI_Flash_wrap").offsetWidth);
    FAPI.UI.setWindowSize(720, 1200);
}, function(error){alert("API initialization failed");}
);
</script>
I hope this works!

If it's the case, then just use

<script type="text/javascript">
FAPI.init("http://api.odnoklassniki.ru/", "XXX_YYY",
function() {
    var height = document.getElementById("FAPI_Flash_wrap").offsetHeight;
    var width = document.getElementById("FAPI_Flash_wrap").offsetWidth;
    FAPI.UI.setWindowSize(width, height);
}, function(error){alert("API initialization failed");}
);
</script>
2
  • I'm sorry, but alerts do not appear at all and the page is not resized. In the Firebug console I see many warnings but no related error. When I put back my original code with hardcoded height - then it suddenly works ok. Jun 4, 2011 at 4:43
  • Hmm, strange. If you try "alert(document.getElementById(someID));" in the Firebug command line, it will necessarily popup either "[object someInterfaceName]" or "null", so you can check if an element with id "someID" exists at this moment. If neither "FAPI_Flash_wrap" nor "FAPI_Flash" exists, maybe the full HTML of the page after successfully loading the game would be useful.
    – Luc125
    Jun 4, 2011 at 10:08
0

Use offsetHeight or clientHeight to get div's height:

document.getElementById("fb-root").offsetHeight // including border
document.getElementById("fb-root").clientHeight // excluding border 

Use offsetLeft and offsetTop to get div's position relative to its offsetParent. offsetParent is its first parent box which position style is fixed, relative or absolute.

7
  • Thank you, but does getElementById() wotrk with all main browsers? Jun 1, 2011 at 8:57
  • YES. Almost all browsers supported getElementById. see this link
    – baotuo
    Jun 1, 2011 at 12:34
  • Unfortunately both offsetHeight and clientHeight are printed as 0 for some reason - please see my updated question Jun 1, 2011 at 16:08
  • Can you paste the content of #fb-root completely? Or give me the link of your test page that I can access.
    – baotuo
    Jun 1, 2011 at 17:01
  • The address is odnoklassniki.ru/game/preferans (I'm sorry - it is at the Russian Facebook-clone). When I alert("XXX " + document.getElementById("fb-root").clientHeight); it prints "XXX 0". The <div id="fb-root"></div> is empty. Above it is my Flash game. I've used an empty div, because that is how it is usually done for the real Facebook: stackoverflow.com/questions/5928724/… Jun 1, 2011 at 19:09

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