4

I want to resize images that are bigger than the window, but I keep getting 0 width and height when I try to get the image size. I read somewhere that it could be because images aren't necessarily loaded at (document).ready so image functions should go under (window).load, but it's no use. I'm a real newbie when it comes to jquery and javascript so I could be doing something wrong.

This is how my javascript file looks:

//<!--
$(document).ready(function(){
    ... 
});

$(window).load(function () {

    $(".lightbox img").each(function() {

        var width = $(this).width();
        var max_width = $(window).width()-30;
        var height = $(this).height();          
        var max_height = $(window).height()-30;

        if(width > max_width || height > max_height) {
            if(height > width) {
                height = max_height;
                width = Math.ceil(width / height * max_height);
            } else {
                width = max_width;
                height = Math.ceil(height / width * max_width);
            }
        }

        $(this).attr("width",width);
        $(this).attr("height",height);

    });
});

//-->

Thanks in advance.

1
  • Is this in script tags at the top of the page?
    – Jivings
    Jan 19, 2012 at 16:04

3 Answers 3

0

Take a look at this project that provides a callback when images have loaded.

Another reason you could be getting no dimensions is an invisible element (parent or self).

1
  • Yes, it's an invisible element (that it's made visible after an event). I hadn't thought about that though it makes perfect sense. Now I get the size after the element is made visible and it works, thanks!
    – Sandra
    Jan 19, 2012 at 16:17
0

Try $(this).css("width") instead of attr

0

When the window loads, the images haven't necessarily loaded yet. JavaScript can't get an image's dimensions until is has completely loaded, and until then, you get a computed value of zero.

Bearing this in mind, a repeating loop might help. (Warning: haven't tested)

var width = 0;
while (!width) {
    width = $(this).width();
}

Watch out for infinite loops, though.

1
  • Would this not actually halt the loading of the image? I really don't advise to use a while loop like this. Why not use $(this).on("load", ...);? Images also have a load event.
    – pimvdb
    Jan 19, 2012 at 16:12

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