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I am trying to get the value of #value_box to display 100.5 but it keeps rounding up. Does anyone know what I can do to get it to show the decimal place?

jsfiddle

<input type="text" id="the_box" style="width:100.5px" value="" />
<input type="text" id="value_box" value="" />

//returns 101
$("#value_box").val($("#the_box").css('width').replace('px', ''));
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    It's probably due to the fact that you can't have half pixels in a screen...jQuery returns the actual size, rather than the one specified in css. This is why you will always get px from jQuery even if you specify other units.
    – JCOC611
    Feb 20, 2015 at 21:14
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    this has nothing to do with the val function. Feb 20, 2015 at 21:15
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    Interestingly: jsfiddle.net/davidThomas/2w5chp8o/1 window.getComputedStyle() returns 100.5 (Chrome 40.x/Win 8.1). Feb 20, 2015 at 21:18
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    The browser has two options: round to 100px or to 101px. It literally cannot display half a pixel. It's not physically possible (unless it uses alpha channels to compute some sort of anti-alias like effect).
    – JCOC611
    Feb 20, 2015 at 21:20
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    @JCOC611 While what you say is true, the browser can factor in these decimals if you zoom the screen. And in fact, chrome at least does take this into consideration. bryan's example fiddle is the same width at 100% zoom but becomes 1 pixel different when zoomed in. Feb 20, 2015 at 21:24

1 Answer 1

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It's .css('width') that rounds. There's a lot to .css in jQuery beyond getComputedStyle. Comparison.

For .css('width'), jQuery uses offsetWidth [source]:

val = name === "width" ? elem.offsetWidth : elem.offsetHeight,

In CSS, pixels are just another unit, defined to be 1/96 of an inch. There's nothing inherently integral about them. In high-DPI displays, such as mobile screens, newer laptops, and printed media, it makes sense to have fractions of "pixels." But offsetWidth is defined to be an integer value [CSSOM]:

readonly attribute long offsetWidth;

In this case, where you explicitly set a width in the inline style, and you want to get it, one thing you could do is just use plain DOM to get it:

$("#the_box")[0].style.width.replace('px', '')

example

You can also try using getBoundingClientRect [CSSOM] and working backwards through the changes introduced by borders and padding. This method returns a DOMRect object with information represented as floating-point numbers [geometry].

$("#the_box")[0].getBoundingClientRect().width - ...
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  • Why do I get a decimal if I use .css('background-size') then? jsfiddle.net/2w5chp8o/5 Does .css('width') round differently then .css('background-size')?
    – bryan
    Feb 20, 2015 at 21:50
  • There's no "hook" that specifies a special routine for handling .css('background-size'), so it just returns the value from the computed style. For width and height, see github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/2.1.3/src/css.js#L337
    – guest
    Feb 20, 2015 at 21:52

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