I would suggest the best way to do this would be to extend jQuery's selectors. Something like this works well:
$.extend($.expr[':'],{
offsetLeft: function(a,i,m) {
if(!m[3]||!(/^(<|>|=)\d+$/).test(m[3])) {return false;}
var offsetLeft = $(a).offset().left;
return m[3].substr(0,1) === '>' ?
offsetLeft > parseInt(m[3].substr(1),10) :
m[3].substr(0,1) === '<' ? offsetLeft < parseInt(m[3].substr(1),10) :
offsetLeft == parseInt(m[3].substr(1),10);
}
});
This would allow you to select elements using syntax such as
$('span:offsetLeft(>10)')
or
$('.someClass:offsetLeft(<10)')
or even
$('.someClass:offsetLeft(=10)')
Live example: http://jsfiddle.net/X4CkC/
Should add that this hooks into jQuery's selectors which are generally quite fast, but no doubt somewhere deep within there is a loop going on. There' no way of avoiding that.
querySelectorAll()cannot match elements from theiroffsetLeftproperty, therefore the implementation of this feature will probably have to take the "slow" approach and walk the document tree anyway. – Frédéric Hamidi Sep 7 '11 at 14:55onload()can freeze the browser for a while (or tab in Chrome's case). At least it can be retrieved almost instantly with XPath later, but the loading time is not healthy. – psycketom Sep 7 '11 at 15:13