I wanted to like the accepted answer, but fundamentally the ones that met my criteria all required used a library. Rather than acquaint myself with yet another library and then figure out how to use it and prepare to debug it if it didn't work, I decided to write a simple function that is working perfectly for me.
Theory:
- pass in the string that you need to fit
- pass in the parent that you will be inheriting text styles from
- optionally pass in custom attributes (e.g., class/id you'll inherit font and other attributes from, or just custom inline styles)
- function will create a text element off screen with that text, that parent, and those attributes, with font size of 1px, and measure it
- then, on a loop, it will increase the font size pixel by pixel until it surpasses the width limit; once it has done that, it will return the last one that did fit
- it then deletes the test element
- this all happens in the blink of an eye of course
Limitations:
- I don't care about dynamic screen resizing, as that's not relevant to my context. I only care about screen size at runtime when generating the text.
- I rely on one small helper function I also use elsewhere in my code, that basically exists as a one-function-version of mithril.js; honestly, I use this little function in almost every project, and it's worth learning itself.
function findMaxFontSize(
string="a string",
parent=document.body,
attributes={id:'font-size-finder',class:'some-class-with-font'}
) {
// by using parent, we can infer the same font inheritance;
// you can also manually specify fonts or relevant classes/id with attributes if preferred/needed
attributes.style = 'position:absolute; left:-10000; font-size:1px;' + (attributes.style || "");
let testFontEl = createEl('p', attributes, string);
parent.appendChild(testFontEl);
let currentWidth = testFontEl.offsetWidth;
let workingFontSize = 1;
let i = 0;
while (currentWidth < maxWidth && i < 1000) {
testFontEl.style.fontSize = Number(testFontEl.style.fontSize.split("px")[0]) + 1 + "px";
currentWidth = testFontEl.offsetWidth;
if (currentWidth < maxWidth) {
workingFontSize = testFontEl.style.fontSize;
}
i++; // safety to prevent infinite loops
}
console.log("determined maximum font size:",workingFontSize,'one larger would produce',currentWidth,'max width allowed is',maxWidth,'parent is',parent);
parent.removeChild(testFontEl);
return workingFontSize.split("px")[0];
}
// utility function, though you could easily modify the function above to work without this.
// normally these have no default values specified, but adding them here
// to make usage clearer.
function createEl(tag="div", attrs={class:'some-class'}, children=[]) {
let el = document.createElement(tag);
if (attrs) {
Object.keys(attrs).forEach(attr => {
el.setAttribute(attr, attrs[attr])
})
}
if (children) {
children = Array.isArray(children) ? children : [children];
for (let child of children) {
if (typeof child === "number") child = ""+child;
if (typeof child === "string") {
el.insertAdjacentText("afterbegin", child);
}
else {
try {
el.appendChild(child)
} catch (e) {
debugger
}
}
}
}
return el;
};
use:
const getUsername = () => "MrHarry";
const username = getUsername();
const anchor = document.querySelector('.container');
const titleFontSize = findMaxFontSize(`Welcome, ${username}`, anchor, {style:'font-weight:900;'});
const titleFontStyle = `font-size:${titleFontSize}px;`;