When the mouse is moved over an element, I want to get the mouse coordinates of the cursor relative to the top-left of the element's content area (this is the area excluding padding, border and outline). Sounds simple, right? What I have so far is a very popular function:
function element_position(e) {
var x = 0, y = 0;
do {
x += e.offsetLeft;
y += e.offsetTop;
} while (e = e.offsetParent);
return { x: x, y: y };
}
And I'd get the mouse position relative to an element element
with:
p = element_position(element);
x = mouseEvent.pageX - p.x;
y = mouseEvent.pageY - p.y;
That isn't quite correct. Because the offsetLeft
and offsetTop
are the differences between the 'outer' top left of an element and the 'inner' top left of its offset parent, the sum position will skip over all borders and paddings in the hierarchy.
Here's a comparison that should (hopefully) clarify what I mean.
- If I get the sum of the distances in position between the 'outer' top left of the elements and the 'inner' top left of their offset parents (outers minus inners; what I am doing right now), I get the element's content area's position, minus all the borders and paddings in the offset hierarchy.
- If I get the sum of the distances in position between the 'outer' top left of the elements and the 'outer' top left of their offset parents (outers minus outers), I get the element's content area's position, minus the border and padding of the desired element (close, but not quite there).
- If I get the sum of the distances in position between the 'inner' top left of the elements and the 'inner' top left of their offset parents (inners minus inners), I get the element's content area's position. This is what I want.
offsetLeft/Top
-type method of getting an element's position is not only incorrect by the size of your target element's border and padding, but all of the borders and paddings of the offset parent elements. Please check out my rewritten question and see if you can weigh in on my situation.