Just wanted to add my experience here, though the question's old: The consensus above seems to be that jQuery's rounding is effectively just as good as an unrounded calculation -- but that doesn't seem to be the case in something I've been doing.
My element has a fluid width, generally, but content that changes dynamically via AJAX. Before switching the content, I temporarily lock the dimensions of the element so my layout doesn't bounce around during the transition. I've found that using jQuery like this:
$element.width($element.width());
is causing some funniness, like there are sub-pixel differences between the actual width and the calculated width. (Specifically, I will see a word jump from one line of text to another, indicating the the width has been changed, not just locked.) From another question -- Getting the actual, floating-point width of an element -- I found out that window.getComputedStyle(element).width
will return an unrounded calculation. So I changed the above code to something like
var e = document.getElementById('element');
$('#element').width(window.getComputedStyle(e).width);
And with THAT code -- no funny bouncing! That experience seems to suggest that the unrounded value actually does matter to the browser, right? (In my case, Chrome Version 26.0.1410.65.)