281

I have some elements on my page which have the CSS rules white-space, overflow, text-overflow set, so that overflowing text is trimmed and an ellipsis is used.

div {
  white-space: nowrap;
  text-overflow: ellipsis;
  overflow: hidden;

  border: 1px solid black;
  width: 150px;
  margin: 5px;
  padding: 5px;
  font-family: sans-serif;
}
<div>
  <span>Normal text</span>
</div>
<div>
  <span>Long text that will be trimmed text</span>
</div>

Is there any way I can use JavaScript to detect which elements' contents are overflowing?

1
  • the ellipsis aspect is irrelevant; all you need to detect is whether it's overflowed.
    – Spudley
    Oct 12, 2011 at 10:58

19 Answers 19

439

Try this JS function, passing the span element as argument:

function isEllipsisActive(e) {
     return (e.offsetWidth < e.scrollWidth);
}
15
  • 19
    This answer and Alex's answer will not work in IE8; there are some odd cases where the scroll width and outerwidth are the same...but it has ellipsis, and then some cases where they are the same...and there is NO ellipsis. In other words, the first solution is the only one that works across all browsers.
    – user1026723
    Dec 5, 2013 at 16:01
  • 8
    For those who need to understand offsetWidth, scrollWidth, and clientWidth, here is a very good explanation: stackoverflow.com/a/21064102/1815779
    – Linh Dam
    Feb 4, 2016 at 3:26
  • 12
    On text-overflow:ellipsis it should be e.offsetWidth <= e.scrollWidth
    – oriadam
    Feb 20, 2017 at 8:39
  • 5
    I'm investigating an issue where the detection seems to be off by one character. I'm detecting overflow one character later than I should. I think there's a slight discrepancy where the ellipsis is shown when the text could actually otherwise fit. I tried temporarily disabling "text-overflow: ellipsis" and sure enough the text fit without any overflow. It might be a browser issue. I'm using Firefox 62 on WIndows 10.
    – Ken Lyon
    Sep 20, 2018 at 22:32
  • 19
    They're always equal to each other on flex children, and thus, won't work for them.
    – Kevin Beal
    Feb 20, 2019 at 15:03
137

Once upon a time I needed to do this, and the only cross-browser reliable solution I came across was hack job. I'm not the biggest fan of solutions like this, but it certainly produces the correct result time and time again.

The idea is that you clone the element, remove any bounding width, and test if the cloned element is wider than the original. If so, you know it's going to have been truncated.

For example, using jQuery:

var $element = $('#element-to-test');
var $c = $element
           .clone()
           .css({display: 'inline', width: 'auto', visibility: 'hidden'})
           .appendTo('body');

if( $c.width() > $element.width() ) {
    // text was truncated. 
    // do what you need to do
}

$c.remove();

I made a jsFiddle to demonstrate this, http://jsfiddle.net/cgzW8/2/

You could even create your own custom pseudo-selector for jQuery:

$.expr[':'].truncated = function(obj) {
  var $this = $(obj);
  var $c = $this
             .clone()
             .css({display: 'inline', width: 'auto', visibility: 'hidden'})
             .appendTo('body');

  var c_width = $c.width();
  $c.remove();

  if ( c_width > $this.width() )
    return true;
  else
    return false;
};

Then use it to find elements

$truncated_elements = $('.my-selector:truncated');

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/cgzW8/293/

Hopefully this helps, hacky as it is.

25
  • 1
    @Lauri No; CSS truncation doesn't change the actual text in the box, so the content is always the same, whether it's truncated, visible, or hidden. There is still no way to programatically get the truncated text, if there was then you wouldn't need to clone the element in the first place!
    – Christian
    Apr 5, 2013 at 21:08
  • 1
    Seems that this won't work in situations where there is no white-space: nowrap. Jul 23, 2014 at 9:31
  • 2
    I must say that after searching a LOT on the internet and tried to implement many solutions, this by far the most reliable one that I found. This solution does not give different results between browsers like element.innerWidth or element.OffsetWidth does which have problem when using margins or padding.. Great solution, Well done.
    – Scription
    Sep 10, 2014 at 14:06
  • 1
    For me, this did not work anywhere. I'm not sure, how it depends on CSS (i've tried to use it on input controls, the solutions below worked at least in Chrome and Firefox (but not in IE11))...
    – Alexander
    Nov 25, 2015 at 10:09
  • 6
    Great solution, especially using jQuery pseudo-selector. But sometimes may not work, because width is calculated incorrectly if the element text has different style (font-size, letter-spacing, margins of inner elements). In that case i would recommend to append clone element to $this.parent() instead of 'body'. This will give exact copy of the element and calculations will be correct. Thanks anyway
    – Alex
    Feb 15, 2016 at 14:08
17

Adding to italo's answer, you can also do this using jQuery.

function isEllipsisActive($jQueryObject) {
    return ($jQueryObject.width() < $jQueryObject[0].scrollWidth);
}

Also, as Smoky pointed out, you may want to use jQuery outerWidth() instead of width().

function isEllipsisActive($jQueryObject) {
    return ($jQueryObject.outerWidth() < $jQueryObject[0].scrollWidth);
}
0
10

Answer from italo is very good! However let me refine it a little:

function isEllipsisActive(e) {
   var tolerance = 2; // In px. Depends on the font you are using
   return e.offsetWidth + tolerance < e.scrollWidth;
}

Cross browser compatibility

If, in fact, you try the above code and use console.log to print out the values of e.offsetWidth and e.scrollWidth, you will notice, on IE, that, even when you have no text truncation, a value difference of 1px or 2px is experienced.

So, depending on the font size you use, allow a certain tolerance!

2
  • It doesn't work on IE10 - offsetWidth is identical to scrollWidth, both giving me the truncated width.
    – Costin_T
    Jan 23, 2017 at 12:07
  • 1
    I need this tolerance on Chrome 60 (latest) too. Sep 6, 2017 at 19:29
7

This sample show tooltip on cell table with text truncated. Is dynamic based on table width:

$.expr[':'].truncated = function (obj) {
    var element = $(obj);

    return (element[0].scrollHeight > (element.innerHeight() + 1)) || (element[0].scrollWidth > (element.innerWidth() + 1));
};

$(document).ready(function () {
    $("td").mouseenter(function () {
        var cella = $(this);
        var isTruncated = cella.filter(":truncated").length > 0;
        if (isTruncated) 
            cella.attr("title", cella.text());
        else 
            cella.attr("title", null);
    });
});

Demo: https://jsfiddle.net/t4qs3tqs/

It works on all version of jQuery

1
  • That's perfect! Exactly what I needed. Just couple of updates from 2023: it should be not $.expr[':'].truncated but $.expr.pseudos.truncated (as of jQuery 3.0), $(...).on('mouseenter', ...) and small improvement for single line $this.attr('title', isTruncated ? $this.text() : null);
    – Alex D
    Oct 23, 2023 at 12:02
6

All the solutions did not really work for me, what did work was compare the elements scrollWidth to the scrollWidth of its parent (or child, depending on which element has the trigger).

When the child's scrollWidth is higher than its parents, it means .text-ellipsis is active.


When el is the parent element

function isEllipsisActive(el) {
    let width       = el.offsetWidth;
    let widthChild  = el.firstChild.offsetWidth;
    return (widthChild >= width);
}

When el is the child element

function isEllipsisActive(event) {
    let width       = el.offsetWidth;
    let widthParent = el.parentElement.scrollWidth;
    return (width >= widthParent);
}
5

elem.offsetWdith VS ele.scrollWidth This work for me! https://jsfiddle.net/gustavojuan/210to9p1/

$(function() {
  $('.endtext').each(function(index, elem) {
    debugger;
    if(elem.offsetWidth !== elem.scrollWidth){
      $(this).css({color: '#FF0000'})
    }
  });
});
1
  • 1
    Neither works in current Chrome nor Firefox. Both elements become red.
    – xehpuk
    Nov 12, 2019 at 21:32
4

My implementation)

const items = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('.item'));
items.forEach(item =>{
    item.style.color = checkEllipsis(item) ? 'red': 'black'
})

function checkEllipsis(el){
  const styles = getComputedStyle(el);
  const widthEl = parseFloat(styles.width);
  const ctx = document.createElement('canvas').getContext('2d');
  ctx.font = `${styles.fontSize} ${styles.fontFamily}`;
  const text = ctx.measureText(el.innerText);
  return text.width > widthEl;
}
.item{
  width: 60px;
  overflow: hidden;
  text-overflow: ellipsis;
}
      <div class="item">Short</div>
      <div class="item">Loooooooooooong</div>

0
2

Adding to @Дмытрык answer, missing deduction of borders and paddings to be fully functional!!

const items = Array.from(document.querySelectorAll('.item'));
items.forEach(item =>{
    item.style.color = checkEllipsis(item) ? 'red': 'black'
})

function checkEllipsis(el){
  const styles = getComputedStyle(el);
  const widthEl = parseFloat(styles.width);
  const ctx = document.createElement('canvas').getContext('2d');
  ctx.font = `${styles.fontSize} ${styles.fontFamily}`;
  const text = ctx.measureText(el.innerText);

  let extra = 0;
  extra += parseFloat(styles.getPropertyValue('border-left-width'));
  extra += parseFloat(styles.getPropertyValue('border-right-width'));
  extra += parseFloat(styles.getPropertyValue('padding-left'));
  extra += parseFloat(styles.getPropertyValue('padding-right'));
  return text.width > (widthEl - extra);
}
.item{
  width: 60px;
  overflow: hidden;
  text-overflow: ellipsis;
}
      <div class="item">Short</div>
      <div class="item">Loooooooooooong</div>

1

I think the better way to detect it is use getClientRects(), it seems each rect has the same height, so we can caculate lines number with the number of different top value.

getClientRects work like this

function getRowRects(element) {
    var rects = [],
        clientRects = element.getClientRects(),
        len = clientRects.length,
        clientRect, top, rectsLen, rect, i;

    for(i=0; i<len; i++) {
        has = false;
        rectsLen = rects.length;
        clientRect = clientRects[i];
        top = clientRect.top;
        while(rectsLen--) {
            rect = rects[rectsLen];
            if (rect.top == top) {
                has = true;
                break;
            }
        }
        if(has) {
            rect.right = rect.right > clientRect.right ? rect.right : clientRect.right;
            rect.width = rect.right - rect.left;
        }
        else {
            rects.push({
                top: clientRect.top,
                right: clientRect.right,
                bottom: clientRect.bottom,
                left: clientRect.left,
                width: clientRect.width,
                height: clientRect.height
            });
        }
    }
    return rects;
}

getRowRects work like this

you can detect like this

0
1

If you're doing react, here's how I did it.

<div 
  ref={ref => {
    if (!ref) return
    const isOverflowing = ref.scrollWidth > ref.clientWidth
    if (isOverflowing) {
      // handle what to do next here
    }
  }}
/>
1

There's a small pixel problem with the answers above when comparing offsetWidth > scrollWidth.

W3C has a legacy API that returns element.scrollWidth value as rounded which is causing the comparison in some cases to to return false. If the element width are 150px and the scrollWidth are 150.4px (rounded to 150), then this check will be returning false even if the browser are showing ellipsis in the text.

They have tried to update the APIs that return fractional pixels, but it was reverted due to webcompat.

There's a workaround using max-content and getClientRects(). Here's a sample code that I use onMouseEnter. Note that this only works if the container has a boundary to 100% of the available width (so if you are using flexbox, your container has to be flex: 1 for example.

hasEllipsis(elementItem) {
    let scrollWidth = elementItem.scrollWidth;
    
    elementItem.style.width = 'max-content';
    const itemRects = elementItem.getClientRects();

    if (itemRects.length > 0 && itemRects[0].width > scrollWidth) {
        scrollWidth = itemRects[0].width;
    }

    elementItem.style.width = 'auto';
    return scrollWidth > elementItem.clientWidth;
}

Articles:

https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=980476

https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/4123

0
0

None of the solutions worked for me, so I chose a totally different approach. Instead of using the CSS solution with ellipsis, I just cut the text from a specific string length.

  if (!this.isFullTextShown && this.text.length > 350) {
    return this.text.substring(0, 350) + '...'
  }
  return this.text

and show "more/less" buttons if the length is exceeded.

  <span
    v-if="text.length > 350"
    @click="isFullTextShown = !isFullTextShown"
  >
    {{ isFullTextShown ? 'show less' : 'show more' }}
  </span>
1
  • 1
    Loving the fact after 10 years this questions still gets action - although I suspect after 10 years browser standards have improved somewhat! :-)
    – deanoj
    Aug 4, 2021 at 14:16
0

For someone who uses e.offsetWidth < e.scrollWidth and got a bug that can show full text but still got ellipsis.

It because offsetWidth and scrollWidth always round the value. For example: offsetWidth return 161 but the actual width is 161.25. The solution is use getBoundingClientRect

const clonedEl = e.cloneNode(true)
clonedElement.style.overflow = "visible"
clonedElement.style.visibility = "hidden"
clonedElement.style.width = "fit-content"

e.parentElement.appendChild(clonedEl)
const fullWidth = clonedElement.getBoundingClientRect().width
const currentWidth = e.getBoundingClientRect().width

return currentWidth < fullWidth

0

Case you are using line-clamp >= 2 line for adding ellipsis at more than one line you can use this conditioning:

if (
      descriptionElement &&
      descriptionElement.offsetHeight < descriptionElement.scrollHeight
    ) {
      // has text-overflow
    }
0

By comparing the clientHeight to the scrollHeight it can be inferred that a truncation is happening if the scrollHeight is greater:

enter image description here

Resizable Example:

const isTextTruncated = node => node.scrollHeight > node.clientHeight
const setTextTruncatedClass = node => node.classList.toggle('truncated', isTextTruncated(node))

// Resize DOM observer
const resizeObserver = new ResizeObserver(m => setTextTruncatedClass(m[0].target))
resizeObserver.observe(document.querySelector('p'), { attributes: true })
p {
  display: -webkit-box;
  -webkit-line-clamp: 4;
  -webkit-box-orient: vertical;
  
  width: 300px;
  resize: horizontal;
  overflow: hidden;
}

/* detection label 
 ********************/
body:has(.truncated)::after {
  content: 'Truncated';
  font: 24px Arial;
  background: red;
  color: white;
  padding: 8px;
  position: absolute;
  bottom: 1em;
  right: 1em;
}
<p>
  <b>Resize this text block:</b> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, 
  sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. 
  Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris 
  nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
</p>

👉 See my Codepen with a more configurable example

-1

The e.offsetWidth < e.scrollWidth solution is not always working.

And if you want to use pure JavaScript, I recommend to use this:

(typescript)

public isEllipsisActive(element: HTMLElement): boolean {
    element.style.overflow = 'initial';
    const noEllipsisWidth = element.offsetWidth;
    element.style.overflow = 'hidden';
    const ellipsisWidth = element.offsetWidth;

    if (ellipsisWidth < noEllipsisWidth) {
      return true;
    } else {
      return false;
    }
}
2
  • 1
    Needing to cause a reflow for each element could potentially be pretty inefficient, like if you're using this across hundreds of cells in a table.
    – Ecksters
    Sep 24, 2020 at 21:18
  • @Ecksters Moreover, a query function that returns the current state of an element should never be allowed to change any property of that element, especially the property queried. Aug 30, 2023 at 12:01
-1

The solution @ItaloBorssatto is perfect. But before looking at SO - I made my decision. Here it is :)

const elems = document.querySelectorAll('span');
elems.forEach(elem => {
  checkEllipsis(elem);
});

function checkEllipsis(elem){
  const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
  const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
  const styles = getComputedStyle(elem);
  ctx.font = `${styles.fontWeight} ${styles.fontSize} ${styles.fontFamily}`;
  const widthTxt = ctx.measureText(elem.innerText).width;
  if (widthTxt > parseFloat(styles.width)){
    elem.style.color = 'red'
  }
}
span.cat {
    display: block;
    border: 1px solid black;
    white-space: nowrap;
    width: 100px;
    overflow: hidden;
    text-overflow: ellipsis;
}
 <span class="cat">Small Cat</span>
      <span class="cat">Looooooooooooooong Cat</span>

-1

there are some mistasks in demo http://jsfiddle.net/brandonzylstra/hjk9mvcy/ mentioned by https://stackoverflow.com/users/241142/iconoclast.

in his demo, add these code will works:

setTimeout(() => {      
  console.log(EntryElm[0].offsetWidth)
}, 0)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.