I have a canvas element defined statically in the html with a width and height. If I attempt to use JavaScript to resize it dynamically (setting a new width and height - either on the attributes of the canvas or via the style properties) I get the following error in Firefox:

uncaught exception: [Exception... "Illegal operation on WrappedNative prototype object" nsresult: "0x8057000c (NS_ERROR_XPC_BAD_OP_ON_WN_PROTO)" location: "JS frame :: file:///home/russh/Desktop/test.html :: onclick :: line 1" data: no]

Is it possible to resize this element or do I have to destroy it and create a new element on the fly?

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Which sort of element and how did you define height and width ?-) – roenving Dec 1 '08 at 14:55
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6 Answers

You didn't publish your code, and I suspect you do something wrong. it is possible to change the size by assigning width and height attributes using numbers:

canvasNode.width  = 200; // in pixels
canvasNode.height = 100; // in pixels

At least it works for me. Make sure you don't assign strings (e.g., "2cm", "3in", or "2.5px"), and don't mess with styles.

Actually this is a publicly available knowledge — you can read all about it in the HTML canvas spec — it is very small and unusually informative. This is the whole DOM interface:

interface HTMLCanvasElement : HTMLElement {
           attribute unsigned long width;
           attribute unsigned long height;

  DOMString toDataURL();
  DOMString toDataURL(in DOMString type, [Variadic] in any args);

  DOMObject getContext(in DOMString contextId);
};

As you can see it defines 2 attributes width and height, and both of them are unsigned long.

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2  
Note: when you change the canvas size it seems to clear the canvas (at least in chrome). – RobKohr Aug 31 '11 at 13:50
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I just had the same problem as you, but found out about the toDataURL method, which proved useful.

The gist of it is to turn your current canvas into a dataURL, change your canvas size, and then draw what you had back into your canvas from the dataURL you saved.

So here's my code:

var oldCanvas = canvas.toDataURL("image/png");
var img = new Image();
img.src = oldCanvas;
img.onload = function (){
    canvas.height += 100;
    ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
}
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This worked for me just now:

<canvas id="c" height="100" width="100" style="border:1px solid red"></canvas>
<script>
var c = document.getElementById('c');
alert(c.height + ' ' + c.width);
c.height = 200;
c.width = 200;
alert(c.height + ' ' + c.width);
</script>
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Yes you have to redraw everything on canvas

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Here's my effort to give a more complete answer (building on @john's answer).

The initial issue I encountered was changing the width and height of a canvas node (using styles), resulted in the contents just being "zoomed" or "shrunk." This was not the desired effect.

So, say you want to draw two rectangles of arbitrary size in a canvas that is 100px by 100px.

<canvas width="100" height="100"></canvas>

To ensure that the rectangles will not exceed the size of the canvas and therefore not be visible, you need to ensure that the canvas is big enough.

var $canvas = $('canvas'),
    oldCanvas,
    context = $canvas[0].getContext('2d');

function drawRects(x, y, width, height)
{
  if (($canvas.width() < x+width) || $canvas.height() < y+height)
  {
    oldCanvas = $canvas[0].toDataURL("image/png")
    $canvas[0].width = x+width;
    $canvas[0].height = y+height;

    var img = new Image();
    img.src = oldCanvas;
    img.onload = function (){
      context.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
    };
  }
  context.strokeRect(x, y, width, height);
}


drawRects(5,5, 10, 10);
drawRects(15,15, 20, 20);
drawRects(35,35, 40, 40);
drawRects(75, 75, 80, 80);

Finally, here's the jsfiddle for this: http://jsfiddle.net/Rka6D/4/ .

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Note that if your canvas is statically declared you should use the width and height attributes, not the style, eg. this will work:

<canvas id="c" height="100" width="100" style="border:1px"></canvas>
<script>
    document.getElementById('c').width = 200;
</script>

But this will not work:

<canvas id="c" style="width: 100px; height: 100px; border:1px"></canvas>
<script>
    document.getElementById('c').width = 200;
</script>
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