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What's the proper way to get the position of an element on the page relative to the viewport (rather than the document).

offsety/x seemed promising:

http://docs.jquery.com/CSS/offset

But that's relative to the document. Is there an equivalent method that returns offsets relative to the viewport?

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3 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

Look into the Dimensions plugin, specifically scrollTop()/scrollLeft(). Information can be found at http://api.jquery.com/scrollTop.

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5  
I didn't want to use another plugin, but $(window).scrollTop() is exactly what I needed! Thanks! – DA. Oct 14 '09 at 16:28
8  
The dimensions plugin is now a part of jQuery core. The ViewPort plugin can also be useful: appelsiini.net/projects/viewport – StriplingWarrior Jun 3 '11 at 18:38

Here are two functions to get the page height and the scroll amounts (x,y) without the use of the (bloated) dimensions plugin:

// getPageScroll() by quirksmode.com
function getPageScroll() {
    var xScroll, yScroll;
    if (self.pageYOffset) {
      yScroll = self.pageYOffset;
      xScroll = self.pageXOffset;
    } else if (document.documentElement && document.documentElement.scrollTop) {
      yScroll = document.documentElement.scrollTop;
      xScroll = document.documentElement.scrollLeft;
    } else if (document.body) {// all other Explorers
      yScroll = document.body.scrollTop;
      xScroll = document.body.scrollLeft;
    }
    return new Array(xScroll,yScroll)
}

// Adapted from getPageSize() by quirksmode.com
function getPageHeight() {
    var windowHeight
    if (self.innerHeight) { // all except Explorer
      windowHeight = self.innerHeight;
    } else if (document.documentElement && document.documentElement.clientHeight) {
      windowHeight = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
    } else if (document.body) { // other Explorers
      windowHeight = document.body.clientHeight;
    }
    return windowHeight
}
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thanks, cballou. Adding that the the arsenal! – DA. Oct 14 '09 at 16:29
This is brilliant. Very useful. – Jimmy Oct 18 '10 at 15:25
Out of curiosity, why did you use the "self" property instead of window in this case? – Denis Kugappi Jan 28 '12 at 16:40
@Denis stackoverflow.com/questions/3638887/… – ring0 Oct 17 '12 at 8:57

The easiest way to determine the size and position of an element is to call its getBoundingClientRect() method. This method returns element positions in viewport coordinates. It expects no arguments and returns an object with properties left, right, top, and bottom. The left and top properties give the X and Y coordinates of the upper-left corner of the element and the right and bottom properties give the coordinates of the lower-right corner.

element.getBoundingClientRect(); // Get position in viewport coordinates

Supported everywhere.

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It is incredible this method was added by IE5... when something is good, is good! – roy riojas Mar 9 at 8:51

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