How can I get windowWidth, windowHeight, pageWidth, pageHeight, screenWidth, screenHeight, pageX, pageY, screenX, screenY which will work in all major browsers?
You can get the size of the window or document with jQuery:
// Size of browser viewport.
$(window).height();
$(window).width();
// Size of HTML document (same as pageHeight/pageWidth in screenshot).
$(document).height();
$(document).width();
For screen size you can use the screen object:
window.screen.height;
window.screen.width;
This has everything you need to know: Get viewport/window size
but in short:
var win = window,
doc = document,
docElem = doc.documentElement,
body = doc.getElementsByTagName('body')[0],
x = win.innerWidth || docElem.clientWidth || body.clientWidth,
y = win.innerHeight|| docElem.clientHeight|| body.clientHeight;
alert(x + ' × ' + y);
Fiddle
Please stop editing this answer. It's been edited 22 times now by different people to match their code format preference. It's also been pointed out that this isn't required if you only want to target modern browsers - if so you only need the following:
const width = window.innerWidth || document.documentElement.clientWidth ||
document.body.clientWidth;
const height = window.innerHeight|| document.documentElement.clientHeight||
document.body.clientHeight;
console.log(width, height);
Here is a cross browser solution with pure JavaScript (Source):
var width = window.innerWidth
|| document.documentElement.clientWidth
|| document.body.clientWidth;
var height = window.innerHeight
|| document.documentElement.clientHeight
|| document.body.clientHeight;
A non-jQuery way to get the available screen dimension. window.screen.width/height has already been put up, but for responsive webdesign and completeness sake I think its worth to mention those attributes:
alert(window.screen.availWidth);
alert(window.screen.availHeight);
http://www.quirksmode.org/dom/w3c_cssom.html#t10 :
availWidth and availHeight - The available width and height on the
screen (excluding OS taskbars and such).
But when we talk about responsive screens and if we want to handle it using jQuery for some reason,
window.innerWidth, window.innerHeight
gives the correct measurement. Even it removes the scroll-bar's extra space and we don't need to worry about adjusting that space :)
Full 2020
I am surprised that question have about 10 years and it looks like so far nobody has given a full answer (with 10 values) yet. So I carefully analyse OP question (especially picture) and have some remarks
center of coordinate system (0,0) is in the viewport (browser window without bars and main borders) top left corner and axes are directed to right and down (what was marked on OP picture) so the values of pageX, pageY, screenX, screenY must be negative (or zero if page is small or not scrolled)
for screenHeight/Width OP wants to count screen height/width including system menu bar (eg. in MacOs) - this is why we NOT use .availWidth/Height (which not count it)
for windowWidth/Height OP don't want to count size of scroll bars so we use .clientWidth/Height
the screenY - in below solution we add to position of top left browser corner (window.screenY) the height of its menu/tabls/url bar). But it is difficult to calculate that value if download-bottom bar appears in browser and/or if developer console is open on page bottom - in that case this value will be increased of size of that bar/console height in below solution. Probably it is impossible to read value of bar/console height to make correction (without some trick like asking user to close that bar/console before measurements...)
pageWidth - in case when pageWidth is smaller than windowWidth we need to manually calculate size of <body> children elements to get this value (we do example calculation in contentWidth in below solution - but in general this can be difficult for that case)
for simplicity I assume that <body> margin=0 - if not then you should consider this values when calculate pageWidth/Height and pageX/Y
function sizes() {
const contentWidth = [...document.body.children].reduce(
(a, el) => Math.max(a, el.getBoundingClientRect().right), 0)
- document.body.getBoundingClientRect().x;
return {
windowWidth: document.documentElement.clientWidth,
windowHeight: document.documentElement.clientHeight,
pageWidth: Math.min(document.body.scrollWidth, contentWidth),
pageHeight: document.body.scrollHeight,
screenWidth: window.screen.width,
screenHeight: window.screen.height,
pageX: document.body.getBoundingClientRect().x,
pageY: document.body.getBoundingClientRect().y,
screenX: -window.screenX,
screenY: -window.screenY - (window.outerHeight-window.innerHeight),
}
}
// TEST
function show() {
console.log(sizes());
}
body { margin: 0 }
.box { width: 3000px; height: 4000px; background: red; }
<div class="box">
CAUTION: stackoverflow snippet gives wrong values for screenX-Y,
but if you copy this code to your page directly the values will be right<br>
<button onclick="show()" style="">CALC</button>
</div>
I test it on Chrome 83.0, Safari 13.1, Firefox 77.0 and Edge 83.0 on MacOs High Sierra
Graphical answer:
(............)
function wndsize(){
var w = 0;var h = 0;
//IE
if(!window.innerWidth){
if(!(document.documentElement.clientWidth == 0)){
//strict mode
w = document.documentElement.clientWidth;h = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
} else{
//quirks mode
w = document.body.clientWidth;h = document.body.clientHeight;
}
} else {
//w3c
w = window.innerWidth;h = window.innerHeight;
}
return {width:w,height:h};
}
function wndcent(){
var hWnd = (arguments[0] != null) ? arguments[0] : {width:0,height:0};
var _x = 0;var _y = 0;var offsetX = 0;var offsetY = 0;
//IE
if(!window.pageYOffset){
//strict mode
if(!(document.documentElement.scrollTop == 0)){offsetY = document.documentElement.scrollTop;offsetX = document.documentElement.scrollLeft;}
//quirks mode
else{offsetY = document.body.scrollTop;offsetX = document.body.scrollLeft;}}
//w3c
else{offsetX = window.pageXOffset;offsetY = window.pageYOffset;}_x = ((wndsize().width-hWnd.width)/2)+offsetX;_y = ((wndsize().height-hWnd.height)/2)+offsetY;
return{x:_x,y:_y};
}
var center = wndcent({width:350,height:350});
document.write(center.x+';<br>');
document.write(center.y+';<br>');
document.write('<DIV align="center" id="rich_ad" style="Z-INDEX: 10; left:'+center.x+'px;WIDTH: 350px; POSITION: absolute; TOP: '+center.y+'px; HEIGHT: 350px"><!--К сожалению, у Вас не установлен flash плеер.--></div>');
You can also get the WINDOW width and height, avoiding browser toolbars and other stuff. It is the real usable area in browser's window.
To do this, use:
window.innerWidth and window.innerHeight properties (see doc at w3schools).
In most cases it will be the best way, in example, to display a perfectly centred floating modal dialog. It allows you to calculate positions on window, no matter which resolution orientation or window size is using the browser.
To check height and width of your current loaded page of any website using "console" or after clicking "Inspect".
step 1: Click the right button of mouse and click on 'Inspect' and then click 'console'
step 2: Make sure that your browser screen should be not in 'maximize' mode. If the browser screen is in 'maximize' mode, you need to first click the maximize button (present either at right or left top corner) and un-maximize it.
step 3: Now, write the following after the greater than sign ('>') i.e.
> window.innerWidth
output : your present window width in px (say 749)
> window.innerHeight
output : your present window height in px (say 359)
Complete guide related to Screen sizes
JavaScript
For height:
document.body.clientHeight // Inner height of the HTML document body, including padding
// but not the horizontal scrollbar height, border, or margin
screen.height // Device screen height (i.e. all physically visible stuff)
screen.availHeight // Device screen height minus the operating system taskbar (if present)
window.innerHeight // The current document's viewport height, minus taskbars, etc.
window.outerHeight // Height the current window visibly takes up on screen
// (including taskbars, menus, etc.)
Note: When the window is maximized this will equal screen.availHeight
For width:
document.body.clientWidth // Full width of the HTML page as coded, minus the vertical scroll bar
screen.width // Device screen width (i.e. all physically visible stuff)
screen.availWidth // Device screen width, minus the operating system taskbar (if present)
window.innerWidth // The browser viewport width (including vertical scroll bar, includes padding but not border or margin)
window.outerWidth // The outer window width (including vertical scroll bar,
// toolbars, etc., includes padding and border but not margin)
Jquery
For height:
$(document).height() // Full height of the HTML page, including content you have to
// scroll to see
$(window).height() // The current document's viewport height, minus taskbars, etc.
$(window).innerHeight() // The current document's viewport height, minus taskbars, etc.
$(window).outerHeight() // The current document's viewport height, minus taskbars, etc.
For width:
$(document).width() // The browser viewport width, minus the vertical scroll bar
$(window).width() // The browser viewport width (minus the vertical scroll bar)
$(window).innerWidth() // The browser viewport width (minus the vertical scroll bar)
$(window).outerWidth() // The browser viewport width (minus the vertical scroll bar)
Reference: https://help.optimizely.com/Build_Campaigns_and_Experiments/Use_screen_measurements_to_design_for_responsive_breakpoints
With the introduction of globalThis in ES2020 you can use properties like.
For screen size:
globalThis.screen.availWidth
globalThis.screen.availHeight
For Window Size
globalThis.outerWidth
globalThis.outerHeight
For Offset:
globalThis.pageXOffset
globalThis.pageYOffset
...& so on.
alert("Screen Width: "+ globalThis.screen.availWidth +"\nScreen Height: "+ globalThis.screen.availHeight)
If you need a truly bulletproof solution for the document width and height (the pageWidth and pageHeight in the picture), you might want to consider using a plugin of mine, jQuery.documentSize.
It has just one purpose: to always return the correct document size, even in scenarios when jQuery and other methods fail. Despite its name, you don't necessarily have to use jQuery – it is written in vanilla Javascript and works without jQuery, too.
Usage:
var w = $.documentWidth(),
h = $.documentHeight();
for the global document. For other documents, e.g. in an embedded iframe you have access to, pass the document as a parameter:
var w = $.documentWidth( myIframe.contentDocument ),
h = $.documentHeight( myIframe.contentDocument );
Update: now for window dimensions, too
Ever since version 1.1.0, jQuery.documentSize also handles window dimensions.
That is necessary because
$( window ).height() is buggy in iOS, to the point of being useless
$( window ).width() and $( window ).height() are unreliable on mobile because they don't handle the effects of mobile zooming.
jQuery.documentSize provides $.windowWidth() and $.windowHeight(), which solve these issues. For more, please check out the documentation.
I wrote a small javascript bookmarklet you can use to display the size. You can easily add it to your browser and whenever you click it you will see the size in the right corner of your browser window.
Here you find information how to use a bookmarklet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookmarklet
Bookmarklet
javascript:(function(){!function(){var i,n,e;return n=function(){var n,e,t;return t="background-color:azure; padding:1rem; position:fixed; right: 0; z-index:9999; font-size: 1.2rem;",n=i('<div style="'+t+'"></div>'),e=function(){return'<p style="margin:0;">width: '+i(window).width()+" height: "+i(window).height()+"</p>"},n.html(e()),i("body").prepend(n),i(window).resize(function(){n.html(e())})},(i=window.jQuery)?(i=window.jQuery,n()):(e=document.createElement("script"),e.src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js",e.onload=n,document.body.appendChild(e))}()}).call(this);
Original Code
The original code is in coffee:
(->
addWindowSize = ()->
style = 'background-color:azure; padding:1rem; position:fixed; right: 0; z-index:9999; font-size: 1.2rem;'
$windowSize = $('<div style="' + style + '"></div>')
getWindowSize = ->
'<p style="margin:0;">width: ' + $(window).width() + ' height: ' + $(window).height() + '</p>'
$windowSize.html getWindowSize()
$('body').prepend $windowSize
$(window).resize ->
$windowSize.html getWindowSize()
return
if !($ = window.jQuery)
# typeof jQuery=='undefined' works too
script = document.createElement('script')
script.src = 'http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1/jquery.min.js'
script.onload = addWindowSize
document.body.appendChild script
else
$ = window.jQuery
addWindowSize()
)()
Basically the code is prepending a small div which updates when you resize your window.
In some cases related with responsive layout $(document).height() can return wrong data that displays view port height only.
For example when some div#wrapper has height:100%, that #wrapper can be stretched by some block inside it. But it's height still will be like viewport height. In such situation you might use
$('#wrapper').get(0).scrollHeight
That represents actual size of wrapper.
I developed a library for knowing the real viewport size for desktops and mobiles browsers, because viewport sizes are inconsistents across devices and cannot rely on all the answers of that post (according to all the research I made about this) : https://github.com/pyrsmk/W
Sometimes you need to see the width/height changes while resizing the window and inner content.
For that I've written a little script that adds a log box that dynamicly monitors all the resizing and almost immediatly updates.
It adds a valid HTML with fixed position and high z-index, but is small enough, so you can:
use it on an actual site
use it for testing mobile/responsive
views
Tested on: Chrome 40, IE11, but it is highly possible to work on other/older browsers too ... :)
function gebID(id){ return document.getElementById(id); }
function gebTN(tagName, parentEl){
if( typeof parentEl == "undefined" ) var parentEl = document;
return parentEl.getElementsByTagName(tagName);
}
function setStyleToTags(parentEl, tagName, styleString){
var tags = gebTN(tagName, parentEl);
for( var i = 0; i<tags.length; i++ ) tags[i].setAttribute('style', styleString);
}
function testSizes(){
gebID( 'screen.Width' ).innerHTML = screen.width;
gebID( 'screen.Height' ).innerHTML = screen.height;
gebID( 'window.Width' ).innerHTML = window.innerWidth;
gebID( 'window.Height' ).innerHTML = window.innerHeight;
gebID( 'documentElement.Width' ).innerHTML = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
gebID( 'documentElement.Height' ).innerHTML = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
gebID( 'body.Width' ).innerHTML = gebTN("body")[0].clientWidth;
gebID( 'body.Height' ).innerHTML = gebTN("body")[0].clientHeight;
}
var table = document.createElement('table');
table.innerHTML =
"<tr><th>SOURCE</th><th>WIDTH</th><th>x</th><th>HEIGHT</th></tr>"
+"<tr><td>screen</td><td id='screen.Width' /><td>x</td><td id='screen.Height' /></tr>"
+"<tr><td>window</td><td id='window.Width' /><td>x</td><td id='window.Height' /></tr>"
+"<tr><td>document<br>.documentElement</td><td id='documentElement.Width' /><td>x</td><td id='documentElement.Height' /></tr>"
+"<tr><td>document.body</td><td id='body.Width' /><td>x</td><td id='body.Height' /></tr>"
;
gebTN("body")[0].appendChild( table );
table.setAttribute(
'style',
"border: 2px solid black !important; position: fixed !important;"
+"left: 50% !important; top: 0px !important; padding:10px !important;"
+"width: 150px !important; font-size:18px; !important"
+"white-space: pre !important; font-family: monospace !important;"
+"z-index: 9999 !important;background: white !important;"
);
setStyleToTags(table, "td", "color: black !important; border: none !important; padding: 5px !important; text-align:center !important;");
setStyleToTags(table, "th", "color: black !important; border: none !important; padding: 5px !important; text-align:center !important;");
table.style.setProperty( 'margin-left', '-'+( table.clientWidth / 2 )+'px' );
setInterval( testSizes, 200 );
EDIT: Now styles are applied only to logger table element - not to all tables - also this is a jQuery-free solution :)
You can use the Screen object to get this.
The following is an example of what it would return:
Screen {
availWidth: 1920,
availHeight: 1040,
width: 1920,
height: 1080,
colorDepth: 24,
pixelDepth: 24,
top: 414,
left: 1920,
availTop: 414,
availLeft: 1920
}
To get your screenWidth variable, just use screen.width, same with screenHeight, you would just use screen.height.
To get your window width and height, it would be screen.availWidth or screen.availHeight respectively.
For the pageX and pageY variables, use window.screenX or Y. Note that this is from the VERY LEFT/TOP OF YOUR LEFT/TOP-est SCREEN. So if you have two screens of width 1920 then a window 500px from the left of the right screen would have an X value of 2420 (1920+500). screen.width/height, however, display the CURRENT screen's width or height.
To get the width and height of your page, use jQuery's $(window).height() or $(window).width().
Again using jQuery, use $("html").offset().top and $("html").offset().left for your pageX and pageY values.
here is my solution!
// innerWidth
const screen_viewport_inner = () => {
let w = window,
i = `inner`;
if (!(`innerWidth` in window)) {
i = `client`;
w = document.documentElement || document.body;
}
return {
width: w[`${i}Width`],
height: w[`${i}Height`]
}
};
// outerWidth
const screen_viewport_outer = () => {
let w = window,
o = `outer`;
if (!(`outerWidth` in window)) {
o = `client`;
w = document.documentElement || document.body;
}
return {
width: w[`${o}Width`],
height: w[`${o}Height`]
}
};
// style
const console_color = `
color: rgba(0,255,0,0.7);
font-size: 1.5rem;
border: 1px solid red;
`;
// testing
const test = () => {
let i_obj = screen_viewport_inner();
console.log(`%c screen_viewport_inner = \n`, console_color, JSON.stringify(i_obj, null, 4));
let o_obj = screen_viewport_outer();
console.log(`%c screen_viewport_outer = \n`, console_color, JSON.stringify(o_obj, null, 4));
};
// IIFE
(() => {
test();
})();
This how I managed to get the screen width in React JS Project:
If width is equal to 1680 then return 570 else return 200
var screenWidth = window.screen.availWidth;
<Label style={{ width: screenWidth == "1680" ? 570 : 200, color: "transparent" }}>a </Label>
Screen.availWidth
Related
I want to provide my visitors the ability to see images in high quality, is there any way I can detect the window size?
Or better yet, the viewport size of the browser with JavaScript? See green area here:
Cross-browser #media (width) and #media (height) values
const vw = Math.max(document.documentElement.clientWidth || 0, window.innerWidth || 0)
const vh = Math.max(document.documentElement.clientHeight || 0, window.innerHeight || 0)
window.innerWidth and window.innerHeight
gets CSS viewport #media (width) and #media (height) which include scrollbars
initial-scale and zoom variations may cause mobile values to wrongly scale down to what PPK calls the visual viewport and be smaller than the #media values
zoom may cause values to be 1px off due to native rounding
undefined in IE8-
document.documentElement.clientWidth and .clientHeight
equals CSS viewport width minus scrollbar width
matches #media (width) and #media (height) when there is no scrollbar
same as jQuery(window).width() which jQuery calls the browser viewport
available cross-browser
inaccurate if doctype is missing
Resources
Live outputs for various dimensions
verge uses cross-browser viewport techniques
actual uses matchMedia to obtain precise dimensions in any unit
jQuery dimension functions
$(window).width() and $(window).height()
You can use the window.innerWidth and window.innerHeight properties.
If you aren't using jQuery, it gets ugly. Here's a snippet that should work on all new browsers. The behavior is different in Quirks mode and standards mode in IE. This takes care of it.
var elem = (document.compatMode === "CSS1Compat") ?
document.documentElement :
document.body;
var height = elem.clientHeight;
var width = elem.clientWidth;
I looked and found a cross browser way:
function myFunction(){
if(window.innerWidth !== undefined && window.innerHeight !== undefined) {
var w = window.innerWidth;
var h = window.innerHeight;
} else {
var w = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
var h = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
}
var txt = "Page size: width=" + w + ", height=" + h;
document.getElementById("demo").innerHTML = txt;
}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body onresize="myFunction()" onload="myFunction()">
<p>
Try to resize the page.
</p>
<p id="demo">
</p>
</body>
</html>
I know this has an acceptable answer, but I ran into a situation where clientWidth didn't work, as iPhone (at least mine) returned 980, not 320, so I used window.screen.width. I was working on existing site, being made "responsive" and needed to force larger browsers to use a different meta-viewport.
Hope this helps someone, it may not be perfect, but it works in my testing on iOs and Android.
//sweet hack to set meta viewport for desktop sites squeezing down to mobile that are big and have a fixed width
//first see if they have window.screen.width avail
(function() {
if (window.screen.width)
{
var setViewport = {
//smaller devices
phone: 'width=device-width,initial-scale=1,maximum-scale=1,user-scalable=no',
//bigger ones, be sure to set width to the needed and likely hardcoded width of your site at large breakpoints
other: 'width=1045,user-scalable=yes',
//current browser width
widthDevice: window.screen.width,
//your css breakpoint for mobile, etc. non-mobile first
widthMin: 560,
//add the tag based on above vars and environment
setMeta: function () {
var params = (this.widthDevice <= this.widthMin) ? this.phone : this.other;
var head = document.getElementsByTagName("head")[0];
var viewport = document.createElement('meta');
viewport.setAttribute('name','viewport');
viewport.setAttribute('content',params);
head.appendChild(viewport);
}
}
//call it
setViewport.setMeta();
}
}).call(this);
I was able to find a definitive answer in JavaScript: The Definitive Guide, 6th Edition by O'Reilly, p. 391:
This solution works even in Quirks mode, while ryanve and ScottEvernden's current solution do not.
function getViewportSize(w) {
// Use the specified window or the current window if no argument
w = w || window;
// This works for all browsers except IE8 and before
if (w.innerWidth != null) return { w: w.innerWidth, h: w.innerHeight };
// For IE (or any browser) in Standards mode
var d = w.document;
if (document.compatMode == "CSS1Compat")
return { w: d.documentElement.clientWidth,
h: d.documentElement.clientHeight };
// For browsers in Quirks mode
return { w: d.body.clientWidth, h: d.body.clientHeight };
}
except for the fact that I wonder why the line if (document.compatMode == "CSS1Compat") is not if (d.compatMode == "CSS1Compat"), everything looks good.
If you are looking for non-jQuery solution that gives correct values in virtual pixels on mobile, and you think that plain window.innerHeight or document.documentElement.clientHeight can solve your problem, please study this link first: https://tripleodeon.com/assets/2011/12/table.html
The developer has done good testing that reveals the problem: you can get unexpected values for Android/iOS, landscape/portrait, normal/high density displays.
My current answer is not silver bullet yet (//todo), but rather a warning to those who are going to quickly copy-paste any given solution from this thread into production code.
I was looking for page width in virtual pixels on mobile, and I've found the only working code is (unexpectedly!) window.outerWidth. I will later examine this table for correct solution giving height excluding navigation bar, when I have time.
This code is from http://andylangton.co.uk/articles/javascript/get-viewport-size-javascript/
function viewport() {
var e = window, a = 'inner';
if (!('innerWidth' in window )) {
a = 'client';
e = document.documentElement || document.body;
}
return { width : e[ a+'Width' ] , height : e[ a+'Height' ] };
}
NB : to read the width, use console.log('viewport width'+viewport().width);
There is a difference between window.innerHeight and document.documentElement.clientHeight. The first includes the height of the horizontal scrollbar.
A solution that would conform to W3C standards would be to create a transparent div (for example dynamically with JavaScript), set its width and height to 100vw/100vh (Viewport units) and then get its offsetWidth and offsetHeight. After that, the element can be removed again. This will not work in older browsers because the viewport units are relatively new, but if you don't care about them but about (soon-to-be) standards instead, you could definitely go this way:
var objNode = document.createElement("div");
objNode.style.width = "100vw";
objNode.style.height = "100vh";
document.body.appendChild(objNode);
var intViewportWidth = objNode.offsetWidth;
var intViewportHeight = objNode.offsetHeight;
document.body.removeChild(objNode);
Of course, you could also set objNode.style.position = "fixed" and then use 100% as width/height - this should have the same effect and improve compatibility to some extent. Also, setting position to fixed might be a good idea in general, because otherwise the div will be invisible but consume some space, which will lead to scrollbars appearing etc.
For detect the Size dynamically
You can do it In Native away, without Jquery or extras
console.log('height default :'+window.visualViewport.height)
console.log('width default :'+window.visualViewport.width)
window.addEventListener('resize',(e)=>{
console.log( `width: ${e.target.visualViewport.width}px`);
console.log( `height: ${e.target.visualViewport.height}px`);
});
This is the way I do it, I tried it in IE 8 -> 10, FF 35, Chrome 40, it will work very smooth in all modern browsers (as window.innerWidth is defined) and in IE 8 (with no window.innerWidth) it works smooth as well, any issue (like flashing because of overflow: "hidden"), please report it. I'm not really interested on the viewport height as I made this function just to workaround some responsive tools, but it might be implemented. Hope it helps, I appreciate comments and suggestions.
function viewportWidth () {
if (window.innerWidth) return window.innerWidth;
var
doc = document,
html = doc && doc.documentElement,
body = doc && (doc.body || doc.getElementsByTagName("body")[0]),
getWidth = function (elm) {
if (!elm) return 0;
var setOverflow = function (style, value) {
var oldValue = style.overflow;
style.overflow = value;
return oldValue || "";
}, style = elm.style, oldValue = setOverflow(style, "hidden"), width = elm.clientWidth || 0;
setOverflow(style, oldValue);
return width;
};
return Math.max(
getWidth(html),
getWidth(body)
);
}
If you are using React, then with latest version of react hooks, you could use this.
// Usage
function App() {
const size = useWindowSize();
return (
<div>
{size.width}px / {size.height}px
</div>
);
}
https://usehooks.com/useWindowSize/
It should be
let vw = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
let vh = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
understand viewport: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Viewport_concepts
shorthand for link above: viewport.moz.one
I've built a site for testing on devices: https://vp.moz.one
you can use
window.addEventListener('resize' , yourfunction);
it will runs yourfunction when the window resizes.
when you use window.innerWidth or document.documentElement.clientWidth it is read only.
you can use if statement in yourfunction and make it better.
You can simply use the JavaScript window.matchMedia() method to detect a mobile device based on the CSS media query. This is the best and most reliable way to detect mobile devices.
The following example will show you how this method actually works:
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
if(window.matchMedia("(max-width: 767px)").matches){
// The viewport is less than 768 pixels wide
alert("This is a mobile device.");
} else{
// The viewport is at least 768 pixels wide
alert("This is a tablet or desktop.");
}
});
</script>
I have div which has inside few divs, few images and two selects. I want to make my main division and all of its content to automatically resize depending on the screen. How can I do it?
Thank you :)
You use media queries for this. It is called responsive design
#media screen and (max-width: 699px) {
div {
width: 40px;
}
}
This will essentially change the width of div to 40px only if the screen width is less than 699px
Further reference:
CSS-Tricks
Here is a tried-and-tested script which even accomodates prehistoric browsers such as IE4. It takes the viewport approach, which means divisions can be updated when a user resizes their browser window.
<script>
window.onResize = function() {
if (window.innerWidth) { // All browsers but IE
myViewportWidth = window.innerWidth;
myViewportHeight = window.innerHeight;
}
else if (document.documentElement && document.documentElement.clientWidth) {
// These functions are for IE6 when there is a DOCTYPE
myViewportWidth = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
myViewportHeight = document.documentElement.clientHeight;
}
else if (document.body.clientWidth) {
// These are for IE4, IE5, and IE6 without a DOCTYPE
myViewportWidth = document.body.clientWidth;
myViewportHeight = document.body.clientHeight;
}
// now call customResize with your chosen new dimensions
// you'll probably need to insert a bit of arithmetic here:
// *calculate new values here*
customResize( MY_NEW_X_VALUE, MY_NEW_Y_VALUE );
}// function
</script>
Once you have the viewport dimensions you can resize your main division according to the specific dimensions of the viewport.
I generally use one main division for the content placed inside the 'body' element for convenience. Then modify the following script according to the dimensions you need.
<script>
function customResize(newWidth, newHeight){
var X = newWidth;
var Y = newHeight;
var e = document.getElementById('mainDiv').style.width = 'X';
var f = document.getElementById('mainDiv').style.height = 'Y';
</script>
Take care to test the code with different browsers however - sometimes odd versions of browsers can return unusual values.
Is there a way to reliably tell a browser's viewport width that includes the scrollbar, but not the rest of browser window)?
None of the properties listed here tell me the width of the screen INCLUDING the scrollbar (if present)
I figured out how to accurately get the viewport width WITH the scrollbar using some code from: http://andylangton.co.uk/blog/development/get-viewport-size-width-and-height-javascript
Put this inside your $(document).ready(function()
$(document).ready(function(){
$(window).on("resize", function(){
function viewport() {
var e = window, a = 'inner';
if (!('innerWidth' in window )) {
a = 'client';
e = document.documentElement || document.body;
}
return { width : e[ a+'Width' ] , height : e[ a+'Height' ] };
}
});
// Get the correct window sizes with these declarations
windowHeight = viewport().height;
windowWidth = viewport().width;
});
What it Does:
When your page is 'ready' or is resized, the function calculates the correct window height and width (including scrollbar).
I assume you want to know the viewport width with scrollbar included, because the screen it self does not have a scrollbar. In fact the Screen width and heigth will be the computer screen resolution itself, so I'm not sure what you mean with screen width with the scroll bar.
The viewport however, the area where only the page (and scroll bars) is presented to the user, meaning, no browser menus, no bookmarks or whatever, only the page rendered, is where such scroll bar may be present.
Assuming you want that, you can measure the client browser viewport size while taking into account the size of the scroll bars this way.
First don't forget to set you body tag to be 100% width and height just to make sure the measurement is accurate.
body {
width: 100%;
// if you wish to also measure the height don't forget to also set it to 100% just like this one.
}
Afterwards you can measure the width at will.
Sample
// First you forcibly request the scroll bars to be shown regardless if you they will be needed or not.
$('body').css('overflow', 'scroll');
// Viewport width with scroll bar.
var widthWithScrollBars = $(window).width();
// Now if you wish to know how many pixels the scroll bar actually has
// Set the overflow css property to forcibly hide the scroll bar.
$('body').css('overflow', 'hidden');
// Viewport width without scroll bar.
var widthNoScrollBars = $(window).width();
// Scroll bar size for this particular client browser
var scrollbarWidth = widthWithScrollBars - widthNoScrollBars;
// Set the overflow css property back to whatever value it had before running this code. (default is auto)
$('body').css('overflow', 'auto');
Hope it helps.
As long as body is 100%, document.body.scrollWidth will work.
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/ThinkingStiff/5j3bY/
HTML:
<div id="widths"></div>
CSS:
body, html
{
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
width: 100%;
}
div
{
height: 1500px;
}
Script:
var widths = 'viewport width (body.scrollWidth): '
+ document.body.scrollWidth + '<br />'
+ 'window.innerWidth: ' + window.innerWidth + '<br />';
document.getElementById( 'widths' ).innerHTML = widths;
I put a tall div in the demo to force a scroll bar.
Currently the new vw and vh css3 properties will show full size including scrollbar.
body {
width:100vw;
height:100vh;
}
There is some discussion online if this is a bug or not.
there is nothing after scrollbar so "rest of the window" is what?
But yes one way to do it is make another wrapper div in body where everything goes and body has overflow:none; height:100%; width:100%; on it, wrapper div also also has 100% width and height. and overflow to scroll. SO NOW...the width of wrapper would be the width of viewport
See Example: http://jsfiddle.net/techsin/8fvne9fz/
html,body {
height: 100%;
overflow: hidden;
}
.wrapper {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
overflow: auto;
}
With jQuery you can calculate the browser's scrollbar width by getting the width difference when overflow: hidden is set and overflow: scroll is set.
The difference in width will be the size of the scrollbar.
Here is a simple example that shows how you could do this.
You can get the window width with scrollbar , that way:
function scrollbar_width() {
if (jQuery('body').height() > jQuery(window).height()) {
/* Modified from: http://jdsharp.us/jQuery/minute/calculate-scrollbar-width.php */
var calculation_content = jQuery('<div style="width:50px;height:50px;overflow:hidden;position:absolute;top:-200px;left:-200px;"><div style="height:100px;"></div>');
jQuery('body').append(calculation_content);
var width_one = jQuery('div', calculation_content).innerWidth();
calculation_content.css('overflow-y', 'scroll');
var width_two = jQuery('div', calculation_content).innerWidth();
jQuery(calculation_content).remove();
return (width_one - width_two);
}
return 0;
}
Check out vw: http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-values/#viewport-relative-lengths
body {
width: 100vw;
}
http://caniuse.com/#search=vw
This is my solution for removing the 'scrollbar shadow', because scrollWidth didn't work for me:
canvas.width = element.offsetWidth;
canvas.height = element.offsetHeight;
canvas.width = element.offsetWidth;
canvas.height = element.offsetHeight;
It's easy, but it works. Make sure to add a comment explaining why you assign the same value twice :)
I'm working with a custom scrolling div jQuery plugin. I want the div to fill 100% of the width of its parent to change size depending on the browser window size.
The script takes a given width parameter, and uses it throughout the script. The customizable parameters of the script seem to only allow me to specify the width in pixels, as an integer:
$.fn.hoverscroll.params = {
vertical: false, // Display the list vertically or not
width: 1280, // Width of the list
height: 230, // Height of the list
arrows: true, // Display arrows to the left and top or the top and bottom
arrowsOpacity: 0.4, // Maximum opacity of the arrows if fixedArrows
fixedArrows: false, // Fix the displayed arrows to the side of the list
rtl: false, // Set display mode to "Right to Left"
debug: false // Display some debugging information in firebug console
};
I tried quoting the percentage, '100%', but that didn't work. Is there a way to use a percentage here?
If not, is there a way to use a script like the one below, which determines the width of the window, make the script output the width in pixels, and use that integer as the width parameter in the jQuery script?
<script type="text/javascript">
function alertSize() {
var myWidth = 0;
if( typeof( window.innerWidth ) == 'number' ) {
//Non-IE
myWidth = window.innerWidth;
} else if( document.documentElement && ( document.documentElement.clientWidth ) ) {
//IE 6+ in 'standards compliant mode'
myWidth = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
} else if( document.body && ( document.body.clientWidth ) ) {
//IE 4 compatible
myWidth = document.body.clientWidth;
}
//window.alert( myWidth );
}
</script>
For reference, here is the full script of the plugin that I'm using:
http://rascarlito.free.fr/hoverscroll/js/hoverscroll/jquery.hoverscroll.js
If you want the width of the hoverscroll region to be some percentage of a container on ready, you can always use jQuery. Wrap your start-up routine in a ready() expression:
$(document).ready(function() {
var w = $(window).width();
var p = 0.95 /* Your percentage */
$.fn.hoverscroll.params = {
width: w * p, // Width of the list
...
};
// Start your hoverscroll like normal;
});
That ... is just there to indicate "the other stuff goes here." I didn't want to fill the answer up with repetitious code.
Although in normal practice, you would never modify the defaults in place, but pass them as arguments:
$(document).ready(function() {
var w = $(window).width();
var p = 0.95 /* Your percentage */
$('#mylist').hoverscroll({
width: w * p // Width of the list
});
});
Note that I'm only passing in the width; everything else uses the defaults. You only have to set the ones that differ from the defaults-- in this example, I've only set the width.
How do I detect the width of a user's window with Javascript and account for their scrollbar? (I need the width of the screen INSIDE of the scrollbar). Here's what I have...it seems to work in multiple browsers...except that it doesn't account for the scrollbars..
function browserWidth() {
var myWidth = 0;
if( typeof( window.innerWidth ) == 'number' ) {
//Non-IE
myWidth = window.innerWidth;
} else if( document.documentElement && document.documentElement.clientWidth ) {
//IE 6+ in 'standards compliant mode'
myWidth = document.documentElement.clientWidth;
} else if( document.body && document.body.clientWidth ) {
//IE 4 compatible
myWidth = document.body.clientWidth;
}
return myWidth;
}
any ideas? i need it to work in all browsers;)
A (markedly nasty) workaround if you're only interested in the width is to create a 1px x 100% div and use its offsetWidth. Works on IE>=7, FF, Chrome, Safari and Opera (I've not tried IE6, as we're working to a you're-lucky-it-works-at-all-so-don't-complain-about-rendering-oddities policy thereabouts these days). I hang the div off document.body with attributes { position: 'absolute', top: '-1px', left: 0, width: '100%', height: '1px' }, creating it the first time it's needed.
Works if you can stomach it.
You will find the big summary of what properties are supported on what browsers on this page on quirksmode.org.
Your best bet is probably to grab an element in the page (using document.body where supported, or document.getElementById or whatever), walk its offsetParent chain to find the topmost element, then examine that element's clientWidth and clientHeight.
Just add that before the window.innerWidth() check:
if (typeof(document.body.clientWidth) == 'number') {
// newest gen browsers
width = document.body.clientWidth;
height = document.body.clientHeight;
}
This is what I did - only half a year into learning JavaScript, so this may be a bad fix. First, I created a transparent square image (10px x 10px), but you could also create a non-transparent image and add this to your JavaScript as
document.getElementById('getDimensions').style.visibility = "hidden";
HTML:
<img id="getDimensions" src="images/aSmallBox.png" alt="A small transparent image
meant to determine the dimensions of the viewport" width="10px" height="10px"/>
JavaScript:
//Inside function called by window.onload event handler (could go in CSS file, but
//better to keep it with other related code in JS file)
document.getElementById('getDimensions').style.position = "fixed";
document.getElementById('getDimensions').style.bottom = "0px";
document.getElementById('getDimensions').style.right = "0px";
//Everything below inside function called by window.onresize event handler
var baseWidthCalculation = document.getElementById('getDimensions').offsetLeft;
var baseHeightCalculation = document.getElementById('getDimensions').offsetTop;
//Account for the dimensions of the square img element (10x10)
var viewportWidth = baseWidthCalculation + 10;
var viewportHeight = baseHeightCalculation + 10;
This is a more efficient version of an idea posted here by Tim Salai ( even though you are just beginning, it was brilliant to place an element in the bottom right corner like that ).
var getDimensions = document.createElement("div");
getDimensions.setAttribute("style",
"visibility:hidden;position:fixed;bottom:0px;right:0px;");
document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0].appendChild(getDimensions);
var viewportWidth = getDimensions.offsetLeft;
var viewportHeight = getDimensions.offsetTop;
And here is a modular version
var PageDimensions = function(){
var Width;
var Height;
function pagedimensionsCtor (){
var getDimensions = document.createElement("div");
getDimensions.setAttribute("style" ,
"visibility:hidden;position:fixed;bottom:0px;right:0px;");
document.getElementsByTagName("body")[0].appendChild(getDimensions);
Width = getDimensions.offsetLeft;
Height = getDimensions.offsetTop;
getDimensions.parentNode.removeChild(getDimensions);
}
pagedimensionsCtor();
function Reset(){
pagedimensionsCtor();
}
function GetPageHeight(){
return Height;
}
function GetPageWidth(){
return Width;
}
return{
Reset: Reset,
GetPageHeight: GetPageHeight,
GetPageWidth: GetPageWidth
};
}
Use the modular version:
var page = new PageDimensions();
console.log("viewportWidth: " + page.GetPageWidth() + " viewportHeight: " + page.GetPageHeight());
Bonus feature:
page.Reset();//just in case you think your dimensions have changed
I would compare the "innerWidth" to the width of the body. If the body width > innerwidth, then scrollbars are present.
if (browserWidth() < document.body.offsetWidth) {
doSomething();
}
Another solution you can try is changing some CSS so scrolling happens within your page, instead of the browser window doing it. In the style for body, add overflow:auto. Now the body element includes the scrollbar, so when you get the window width you're measuring the width outside the scrolling container instead of inside it.
This does feel like a potential source of quirkiness, and possibly an accessibility issue, so if you're going for widespread use you might want to test it quite carefully.