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Working with the mouse within Javascript I have occasionally met the following event attributes:

  • clientX, clientY
  • layerX, layerY
  • offsetX, offsetY
  • pageX, pageY
  • screenX, screenY
  • x, y

I'm wondering what their cross-browser compatibility looks like in general, as I have only found bits and pieces of info that I'm trying to patch up together.

2 Answers 2

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Here is how jQuery does it :

// Calculate pageX/Y if missing and clientX/Y available
if ( event.pageX == null && event.clientX != null ) {
  var doc = document.documentElement, body = document.body;
  event.pageX = event.clientX + (doc && doc.scrollLeft || body && body.scrollLeft || 0) - (doc && doc.clientLeft || body && body.clientLeft || 0);
  event.pageY = event.clientY + (doc && doc.scrollTop  || body && body.scrollTop  || 0) - (doc   && doc.clientTop  || body && body.clientTop  || 0);
}

Testing pageX (or pageY) or calculating it from clientX and scrollLeft ans clientLeft

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  • thanks not the answer I was looking for, but alas... VERY USEFUL! Thanks! =)
    – RadiantHex
    Jul 27, 2010 at 12:53
1

You should only rely on client*, movement*, screen*. In MDN Web docs, their compatibility is unknown in most major browsers but they should be considered as support (otherwise, jQuery would be broken in many cases).

page* are not supported in Firefox, but they can be calculated from the above properties. Here is the link to the jQuery implementation.

Other properties, offset*, x, y, layer* are not standard and you should stop using them if you want to write a high compatibility-level code.

I also made a blog post to summarize all dimensional or position-related properties/methods in Javascript here. Anyone can take a look to see if it is helpful.

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