I need to get the X,Y coordinates (relative to the document's top/left) for a DOM element. I can't locate any plugins or jQuery property or method that can give these to me. I can get the top and left of the DOM element, but that can be either relative to its current container/parent or to document.
3 Answers
you can use Dimensions plugin [Deprecated... included in jQuery 1.3.2+]
offset()
Get the current offset of the first matched element, in pixels, relative to the document.position()
Gets the top and left position of an element relative to its offset parent.
knowing this, then it's easy... (using my little svg project as an example page)
var x = $("#wrapper2").offset().left;
var y = $("#wrapper2").offset().top;
console.log('x: ' + x + ' y: ' + y);
output:
x: 53 y: 177
hope it helps what you're looking for.
here's an image of offset() and position()
using XRay
using Web Developer toolbar
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See: docs.jquery.com/Plugins/dimensions "Deprecated: As of jQuery 1.2.6, the dimensions plugin has been merged into core. You can view the full documentation in the CSS category. " plus, this is only relative positions– DMCSJun 16, 2009 at 17:54
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if you run that code on that page of the project you can verify that is not relative but they are absolute values. Jun 16, 2009 at 17:57
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Looks like they've resolved the issues in a newer release of jQuery. Using 1.3.2 seems to give the document x,y coordinates like I was hoping. And I tested this in IE7, FF3 and Safari3 and they all seem to be behaving correctly– DMCSJun 16, 2009 at 18:12
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1Just came across another abnormality. It doesn't account for margins of the element you're selecting. So to get the visual x,y of the viewable element...I'm going to need to add those on.– DMCSJun 16, 2009 at 18:45
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1@balexandre do you think you could help me with this question : stackoverflow.com/questions/19100184/…– eddySep 30, 2013 at 17:49
My solution is a plugin with "workarounds" :+D . But Works!
jQuery.fn.getPos = function(){
var o = this[0];
var left = 0, top = 0, parentNode = null, offsetParent = null;
offsetParent = o.offsetParent;
var original = o;
var el = o;
while (el.parentNode != null) {
el = el.parentNode;
if (el.offsetParent != null) {
var considerScroll = true;
if (window.opera) {
if (el == original.parentNode || el.nodeName == "TR") {
considerScroll = false;
}
}
if (considerScroll) {
if (el.scrollTop && el.scrollTop > 0) {
top -= el.scrollTop;
}
if (el.scrollLeft && el.scrollLeft > 0) {
left -= el.scrollLeft;
}
}
}
if (el == offsetParent) {
left += o.offsetLeft;
if (el.clientLeft && el.nodeName != "TABLE") {
left += el.clientLeft;
}
top += o.offsetTop;
if (el.clientTop && el.nodeName != "TABLE") {
top += el.clientTop;
}
o = el;
if (o.offsetParent == null) {
if (o.offsetLeft) {
left += o.offsetLeft;
}
if (o.offsetTop) {
top += o.offsetTop;
}
}
offsetParent = o.offsetParent;
}
}
return {
left: left,
top: top
};
};
Usage:
var p = $("#wrapper2").getPos();
alert("top:"+p.top+"; left:"+p.left);
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8you know that there are frameworks just so we don't need to re-write code, right? Apr 20, 2010 at 11:57
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10frameworks are great until you have to write a userscript. Or when you want to write a patch to jQuery; there are still reasons to know javascript. Mar 16, 2011 at 23:49
The offset function will do that for you.
Here is the example they give:
var p = $("p:last");
var offset = p.offset();
p.html( "left: " + offset.left + ", top: " + offset.top );