Calculate the true pixel width of a given string - javascript

I want to calculate width in px for given text in span element. I check several answers in Stackoverflow. However nothing work for me :(. I am trying to figure out what I am doing wrong. Here is jsFiddle link. And here is code:
$.fn.textWidth = function(){
var html_org = $(this).html();
var html_calc = '<span>' + html_org + '</span>';
$(html_calc).css('font-size', this.css('font-size'));
$(this).html(html_calc);
var width = $(this).find('span:first').width();
$(this).html(html_org);
return width;
};
var ts_name = $('span#ts_name');
var ts_name_text=ts_name.text().trim();
var ts_name_p_box_width = $('div#container-testset-name').innerWidth()-100;
var text_width = $(ts_name).textWidth();
My result for text_p_box_width is 737px and for text_width 715px. However it is clear from html view in Chrome browser text size is bigger than its container. SO what is my mistake? Thank you in advance.
P.S. If you need some clarification please leave as comment.
Edit: I saw similar answer of #LeeTaylor in other question. However it doesn't solve my problem. Because in my case text inside of span element. But in your case text inside of div. I can not change span's display property to block. So for my case this does not work. I tried to generate dynamically two elements using jQuery and try to fetch width. But it is 0. I found that since this dynamically created objects does not included to DOM tree and CSS not applied it will work.
`var ts_name=$('span#ts_name').text().trim();
var text_container = $(document.createElement('span')).html(ts_name).attr('id', 'input_text');
var block_container = $(document.createElement('div')).html(text_container).css({display:'block'});
block_container.css({width: '3000px'});
console.log($(block_container).find('span#input_text').width());
console.log($(block_container).find('span#input_text').outerWidth());
console.log($(block_container).find('span#input_text').innerWidth());
I did because I want to use your solution however it does not work. So do you have any idea on that?
SOLUTION: I figure out why my code is not working I just change only one value in css like this:
div#ts_designer>div#container-testset-name.c-group-inner-row span#ts_name
{
position: absolute;
left: 100px;
right: 0;
top: 0px;
bottom: 0;
width: auto!important;
white-space: nowrap; /*This line added*/
}
Here is updated jsFiddle link.
P.S. I will up vote your answers as reward to your answers. However I cannot accept one of them.

Have you tried using scrollWidth?
This might do what you want it to: http://jsfiddle.net/eJMAD/
scrollWidth might not work the same across all browsers though, so maybe someone else has a better solution more cross-browser friendly.

I use this utility function:
HTML:
<div>hello this is a test</div>
jQuery:
$.fn.textWidth = function()
{
var old = $(this).html();
$(this).html( $("<span>").html( $(this).html() ) );
var width = $(this).find("span:first").width();
$(this).html(old);
return width;
};
alert("Width of the text in the div = " + $("div").textWidth());
jsfiddle

Related

Getting margin-top with obj.style.marginTop failed, but it worked if marginTop was set explicitly first

Please review this question first:
document.body.style.marginTop returning blank string in JS
There were a couple working solutions... then there was my working solution:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/34473070/2813224
Summary:
Tried to get the margin-top value of a div by doing the following code as well as variations of the same:
/*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[ Attempt 1 ]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*/
alert(document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop);
/*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[ Attempt 2 ]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*/
var tDiv = document.getElementById('testDiv');
var tMgn = tDiv.style.marginTop;
alert(tMgn);
/*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[ Attempt 3 ]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*/
var tDiv = document.querySelector('testDiv');
alert(tDiv.style.marginTop);
/*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[ Attempt 4 ]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*/
function mTop() {
var tDiv = document.getElementById('testDiv');
var tMgn = tDiv.style.marginTop;
alert(tMgn);
}
mTop();
The one thing these combinations had in common is .style.marginTop. The Op's question was answered shortly thereafter.
My question is this:
I don't know why, but I got it working by explicitly assigning the margin-top by JS first. I never had to set a style value first just to get a style value back, especially if it's already set by CSS. Why would something simple like:
alert(document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop);
not work, but this does:
document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop = "50px";
alert(document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop);
When CSS is already:
#testDiv { margin-top: 50px; }
?
Snippet of my working answer:
document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop = '50px';
document.body.style.marginTop = '100px';
alert(document.getElementById("testDiv").style.marginTop);
alert(document.body.style.marginTop);
body {
margin-top: 100px;
}
#testDiv {
margin-top: 50px;
}
hi!
<div id="testDiv">test</div>
You need to use the window.getComputedStyle to get the style that was computed, but not set through JavaScript, as HTMLElement.style can get only the inline styles.
The syntax is:
var style = window.getComputedStyle(element[, pseudoElt]);
So in your case, it should be:
var elem = document.getElementById("testDiv");
var theCSSprop = window.getComputedStyle(elem,null).getPropertyValue("margin-top");
document.getElementById("output").innerHTML = theCSSprop;

Extend Existing CSS style by percent- % using JQuery

I am trying to extend an existing css style by 1%, using the following code, but instead its being increment in pixels instead of %.So instead of giving - 7%, its giving me it as 7px.
$("#label").css("top", "+=1%");
The top most div is of size - width: 100%; and the label top : 6% which is already defined.
Any idea/suggestion on this would be really helpful
You can try to get the current top property value, and then add 1%;
var currentTop = $("#label").css("top");
var topAdded = parseInt(currentTop.replace("%","")) + 1;
$("#label").css("top", topAdded + "%");
You can do this:
var top = parseInt($("#label").css("top").replace("%", ""));
top ++;
$("#label").css("top", top+"%")
Update:
For one line statement you can do this:
$("#label").css("top", (parseInt($("#label").css("top").replace("%", "")+1)+"%")

Modify external CSS values

Hi I am trying to dynamicly change the height of a division using JavaScript but I can only get the JS to read the Height element of the div if it defined using style tags inside the HTML mark-up.
If its in a separate sheet it returns NaN, I'm assuming because it can't find a value and is actually returning null (I'm using ParseInt to make it work).
Here is the HTML:
<div id="dropdown_container">
<div id="dropdown" style="height:100px;">
a
</div>
</div>
(Wish the HTML stlye markup)
And here is the JS:
function clickDown() {
var el = document.getElementById('dropdown');
var maxHeight = 200;
getHeight = parseInt(el.style.height.substring(0,(el.style.height.length)-2));
console.log(getHeight);
getHeight += 2;
el.style.height = getHeight + 'px';
timeoutHeightInc = setTimeout('clickDown()',15);
if(getHeight >= maxHeight){
clearTimeout(timeoutHeightInc);
}
}
Does anyone know of a reason for this (mis?)functionaility. And a solution for it?
Here is a jsFiddle.
Try moving the height over to the CSS to see the issue i'm having.
ParseInt is missing it's radix.
You say:
I can only get the JS to read the Height element of the div if it
defined using style tags inside the HTML mark-up
Now you are only reading the div's attribute style. Which you set inline. So if you remove that, than you can not read it anymore. Make sense?
You want to get the computed height. Try: .offsetHeight
Basis of test-case to play with inc. fixed radix. this fiddle
UPDATE: tada: fixed, see this updated fiddle
function clickDown() {
var el = document.getElementById('dropdown');
var maxHeight = 200;
getHeight = parseInt(el.offsetHeight,10);
console.log(getHeight);
getHeight += 2;
el.style.height = getHeight + 'px';
timeoutHeightInc = setTimeout('clickDown()',15);
if(getHeight >= maxHeight){
clearTimeout(timeoutHeightInc);
}
}

How can I invoke a javascript function div upon divs overlapping

I have 2 divs, one positioned absolutely right: 0 and the other relatively positioned center screen. When the window's width is too small, they overlap. How can I invoke a javascript function when this happens?
Thanks.
Mike
Edited to make clearer.
To check for overlapping div's you might wanna do a check once the page is loaded, and whenever the window is resized:
window.onload = checkOverlap;
window.onresize = checkOverlap;
And then use some offset-checking:
function checkOverlap() {
var centerBox = document.getElementById('centerDiv');
var rightBox = document.getElementById('rightDiv');
console.log("centerbox offset left: " + centerBox.offsetLeft);
console.log("centerbox width: " + centerBox.offsetWidth);
console.log("rightbox offset left: " + rightBox.offsetLeft);
if ((centerBox.offsetLeft + centerBox.offsetWidth) >= rightBox.offsetLeft) {
centerBox.style.display = "inline-block";
} else {
centerBox.style.display = "block";
}
}
You might wanna do some more checks in the function, e.g. to see if the box is already displayed inline, and such. But that should give you a good place to start.
edit: added some diagnostics and fixed error
Part 1:
Do it like this:
<script type="text/javascript">
document.getElementById('example').style.display = "inline";
</script>
...
<div id="example"> ... </div>
document.getElementById('div_id').style.display = 'inline-block'
document.getElementById('div_id').offsetWidth gives us width of div
offsetHeight, offsetLeft, offsetTop are useful also.

How to autosize a textarea using Prototype?

I'm currently working on an internal sales application for the company I work for, and I've got a form that allows the user to change the delivery address.
Now I think it would look much nicer, if the textarea I'm using for the main address details would just take up the area of the text in it, and automatically resize if the text was changed.
Here's a screenshot of it currently.
Any ideas?
#Chris
A good point, but there are reasons I want it to resize. I want the area it takes up to be the area of the information contained in it. As you can see in the screen shot, if I have a fixed textarea, it takes up a fair wack of vertical space.
I can reduce the font, but I need address to be large and readable. Now I can reduce the size of the text area, but then I have problems with people who have an address line that takes 3 or 4 (one takes 5) lines. Needing to have the user use a scrollbar is a major no-no.
I guess I should be a bit more specific. I'm after vertical resizing, and the width doesn't matter as much. The only problem that happens with that, is the ISO number (the large "1") gets pushed under the address when the window width is too small (as you can see on the screenshot).
It's not about having a gimick; it's about having a text field the user can edit that won't take up unnecessary space, but will show all the text in it.
Though if someone comes up with another way to approach the problem I'm open to that too.
I've modified the code a little because it was acting a little odd. I changed it to activate on keyup, because it wouldn't take into consideration the character that was just typed.
resizeIt = function() {
var str = $('iso_address').value;
var cols = $('iso_address').cols;
var linecount = 0;
$A(str.split("\n")).each(function(l) {
linecount += 1 + Math.floor(l.length / cols); // Take into account long lines
})
$('iso_address').rows = linecount;
};
Facebook does it, when you write on people's walls, but only resizes vertically.
Horizontal resize strikes me as being a mess, due to word-wrap, long lines, and so on, but vertical resize seems to be pretty safe and nice.
None of the Facebook-using-newbies I know have ever mentioned anything about it or been confused. I'd use this as anecdotal evidence to say 'go ahead, implement it'.
Some JavaScript code to do it, using Prototype (because that's what I'm familiar with):
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<script src="http://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script language="javascript">
google.load('prototype', '1.6.0.2');
</script>
</head>
<body>
<textarea id="text-area" rows="1" cols="50"></textarea>
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
resizeIt = function() {
var str = $('text-area').value;
var cols = $('text-area').cols;
var linecount = 0;
$A(str.split("\n")).each( function(l) {
linecount += Math.ceil( l.length / cols ); // Take into account long lines
})
$('text-area').rows = linecount + 1;
};
// You could attach to keyUp, etc. if keydown doesn't work
Event.observe('text-area', 'keydown', resizeIt );
resizeIt(); //Initial on load
</script>
</body>
</html>
PS: Obviously this JavaScript code is very naive and not well tested, and you probably don't want to use it on textboxes with novels in them, but you get the general idea.
One refinement to some of these answers is to let CSS do more of the work.
The basic route seems to be:
Create a container element to hold the textarea and a hidden div
Using Javascript, keep the textarea’s contents synced with the div’s
Let the browser do the work of calculating the height of that div
Because the browser handles rendering / sizing the hidden div, we avoid
explicitly setting the textarea’s height.
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', () => {
textArea.addEventListener('change', autosize, false)
textArea.addEventListener('keydown', autosize, false)
textArea.addEventListener('keyup', autosize, false)
autosize()
}, false)
function autosize() {
// Copy textarea contents to div browser will calculate correct height
// of copy, which will make overall container taller, which will make
// textarea taller.
textCopy.innerHTML = textArea.value.replace(/\n/g, '<br/>')
}
html, body, textarea {
font-family: sans-serif;
font-size: 14px;
}
.textarea-container {
position: relative;
}
.textarea-container > div, .textarea-container > textarea {
word-wrap: break-word; /* make sure the div and the textarea wrap words in the same way */
box-sizing: border-box;
padding: 2px;
width: 100%;
}
.textarea-container > textarea {
overflow: hidden;
position: absolute;
height: 100%;
}
.textarea-container > div {
padding-bottom: 1.5em; /* A bit more than one additional line of text. */
visibility: hidden;
}
<div class="textarea-container">
<textarea id="textArea"></textarea>
<div id="textCopy"></div>
</div>
Here's another technique for autosizing a textarea.
Uses pixel height instead of line height: more accurate handling of line wrap if a proportional font is used.
Accepts either ID or element as input
Accepts an optional maximum height parameter - useful if you'd rather not let the text area grow beyond a certain size (keep it all on-screen, avoid breaking layout, etc.)
Tested on Firefox 3 and Internet Explorer 6
Code:
(plain vanilla JavaScript)
function FitToContent(id, maxHeight)
{
var text = id && id.style ? id : document.getElementById(id);
if (!text)
return;
/* Accounts for rows being deleted, pixel value may need adjusting */
if (text.clientHeight == text.scrollHeight) {
text.style.height = "30px";
}
var adjustedHeight = text.clientHeight;
if (!maxHeight || maxHeight > adjustedHeight)
{
adjustedHeight = Math.max(text.scrollHeight, adjustedHeight);
if (maxHeight)
adjustedHeight = Math.min(maxHeight, adjustedHeight);
if (adjustedHeight > text.clientHeight)
text.style.height = adjustedHeight + "px";
}
}
Demo:
(uses jQuery, targets on the textarea I'm typing into right now - if you have Firebug installed, paste both samples into the console and test on this page)
$("#post-text").keyup(function()
{
FitToContent(this, document.documentElement.clientHeight)
});
Probably the shortest solution:
jQuery(document).ready(function(){
jQuery("#textArea").on("keydown keyup", function(){
this.style.height = "1px";
this.style.height = (this.scrollHeight) + "px";
});
});
This way you don't need any hidden divs or anything like that.
Note: you might have to play with this.style.height = (this.scrollHeight) + "px"; depending on how you style the textarea (line-height, padding and that kind of stuff).
Here's a Prototype version of resizing a text area that is not dependent on the number of columns in the textarea. This is a superior technique because it allows you to control the text area via CSS as well as have variable width textarea. Additionally, this version displays the number of characters remaining. While not requested, it's a pretty useful feature and is easily removed if unwanted.
//inspired by: http://github.com/jaz303/jquery-grab-bag/blob/63d7e445b09698272b2923cb081878fd145b5e3d/javascripts/jquery.autogrow-textarea.js
if (window.Widget == undefined) window.Widget = {};
Widget.Textarea = Class.create({
initialize: function(textarea, options)
{
this.textarea = $(textarea);
this.options = $H({
'min_height' : 30,
'max_length' : 400
}).update(options);
this.textarea.observe('keyup', this.refresh.bind(this));
this._shadow = new Element('div').setStyle({
lineHeight : this.textarea.getStyle('lineHeight'),
fontSize : this.textarea.getStyle('fontSize'),
fontFamily : this.textarea.getStyle('fontFamily'),
position : 'absolute',
top: '-10000px',
left: '-10000px',
width: this.textarea.getWidth() + 'px'
});
this.textarea.insert({ after: this._shadow });
this._remainingCharacters = new Element('p').addClassName('remainingCharacters');
this.textarea.insert({after: this._remainingCharacters});
this.refresh();
},
refresh: function()
{
this._shadow.update($F(this.textarea).replace(/\n/g, '<br/>'));
this.textarea.setStyle({
height: Math.max(parseInt(this._shadow.getHeight()) + parseInt(this.textarea.getStyle('lineHeight').replace('px', '')), this.options.get('min_height')) + 'px'
});
var remaining = this.options.get('max_length') - $F(this.textarea).length;
this._remainingCharacters.update(Math.abs(remaining) + ' characters ' + (remaining > 0 ? 'remaining' : 'over the limit'));
}
});
Create the widget by calling new Widget.Textarea('element_id'). The default options can be overridden by passing them as an object, e.g. new Widget.Textarea('element_id', { max_length: 600, min_height: 50}). If you want to create it for all textareas on the page, do something like:
Event.observe(window, 'load', function() {
$$('textarea').each(function(textarea) {
new Widget.Textarea(textarea);
});
});
Here is a solution with JQuery:
$(document).ready(function() {
var $abc = $("#abc");
$abc.css("height", $abc.attr("scrollHeight"));
})
abc is a teaxtarea.
Check the below link:
http://james.padolsey.com/javascript/jquery-plugin-autoresize/
$(document).ready(function () {
$('.ExpandableTextCSS').autoResize({
// On resize:
onResize: function () {
$(this).css({ opacity: 0.8 });
},
// After resize:
animateCallback: function () {
$(this).css({ opacity: 1 });
},
// Quite slow animation:
animateDuration: 300,
// More extra space:
extraSpace:20,
//Textarea height limit
limit:10
});
});
Just revisiting this, I've made it a little bit tidier (though someone who is full bottle on Prototype/JavaScript could suggest improvements?).
var TextAreaResize = Class.create();
TextAreaResize.prototype = {
initialize: function(element, options) {
element = $(element);
this.element = element;
this.options = Object.extend(
{},
options || {});
Event.observe(this.element, 'keyup',
this.onKeyUp.bindAsEventListener(this));
this.onKeyUp();
},
onKeyUp: function() {
// We need this variable because "this" changes in the scope of the
// function below.
var cols = this.element.cols;
var linecount = 0;
$A(this.element.value.split("\n")).each(function(l) {
// We take long lines into account via the cols divide.
linecount += 1 + Math.floor(l.length / cols);
})
this.element.rows = linecount;
}
}
Just it call with:
new TextAreaResize('textarea_id_name_here');
I've made something quite easy. First I put the TextArea into a DIV. Second, I've called on the ready function to this script.
<div id="divTable">
<textarea ID="txt" Rows="1" TextMode="MultiLine" />
</div>
$(document).ready(function () {
var heightTextArea = $('#txt').height();
var divTable = document.getElementById('divTable');
$('#txt').attr('rows', parseInt(parseInt(divTable .style.height) / parseInt(altoFila)));
});
Simple. It is the maximum height of the div once it is rendered, divided by the height of one TextArea of one row.
I needed this function for myself, but none of the ones from here worked as I needed them.
So I used Orion's code and changed it.
I added in a minimum height, so that on the destruct it does not get too small.
function resizeIt( id, maxHeight, minHeight ) {
var text = id && id.style ? id : document.getElementById(id);
var str = text.value;
var cols = text.cols;
var linecount = 0;
var arStr = str.split( "\n" );
$(arStr).each(function(s) {
linecount = linecount + 1 + Math.floor(arStr[s].length / cols); // take into account long lines
});
linecount++;
linecount = Math.max(minHeight, linecount);
linecount = Math.min(maxHeight, linecount);
text.rows = linecount;
};
Like the answer of #memical.
However I found some improvements. You can use the jQuery height() function. But be aware of padding-top and padding-bottom pixels. Otherwise your textarea will grow too fast.
$(document).ready(function() {
$textarea = $("#my-textarea");
// There is some diff between scrollheight and height:
// padding-top and padding-bottom
var diff = $textarea.prop("scrollHeight") - $textarea.height();
$textarea.live("keyup", function() {
var height = $textarea.prop("scrollHeight") - diff;
$textarea.height(height);
});
});
My solution not using jQuery (because sometimes they don't have to be the same thing) is below. Though it was only tested in Internet Explorer 7, so the community can point out all the reasons this is wrong:
textarea.onkeyup = function () { this.style.height = this.scrollHeight + 'px'; }
So far I really like how it's working, and I don't care about other browsers, so I'll probably apply it to all my textareas:
// Make all textareas auto-resize vertically
var textareas = document.getElementsByTagName('textarea');
for (i = 0; i<textareas.length; i++)
{
// Retain textarea's starting height as its minimum height
textareas[i].minHeight = textareas[i].offsetHeight;
textareas[i].onkeyup = function () {
this.style.height = Math.max(this.scrollHeight, this.minHeight) + 'px';
}
textareas[i].onkeyup(); // Trigger once to set initial height
}
Here is an extension to the Prototype widget that Jeremy posted on June 4th:
It stops the user from entering more characters if you're using limits in textareas. It checks if there are characters left. If the user copies text into the textarea, the text is cut off at the max. length:
/**
* Prototype Widget: Textarea
* Automatically resizes a textarea and displays the number of remaining chars
*
* From: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7477/autosizing-textarea
* Inspired by: http://github.com/jaz303/jquery-grab-bag/blob/63d7e445b09698272b2923cb081878fd145b5e3d/javascripts/jquery.autogrow-textarea.js
*/
if (window.Widget == undefined) window.Widget = {};
Widget.Textarea = Class.create({
initialize: function(textarea, options){
this.textarea = $(textarea);
this.options = $H({
'min_height' : 30,
'max_length' : 400
}).update(options);
this.textarea.observe('keyup', this.refresh.bind(this));
this._shadow = new Element('div').setStyle({
lineHeight : this.textarea.getStyle('lineHeight'),
fontSize : this.textarea.getStyle('fontSize'),
fontFamily : this.textarea.getStyle('fontFamily'),
position : 'absolute',
top: '-10000px',
left: '-10000px',
width: this.textarea.getWidth() + 'px'
});
this.textarea.insert({ after: this._shadow });
this._remainingCharacters = new Element('p').addClassName('remainingCharacters');
this.textarea.insert({after: this._remainingCharacters});
this.refresh();
},
refresh: function(){
this._shadow.update($F(this.textarea).replace(/\n/g, '<br/>'));
this.textarea.setStyle({
height: Math.max(parseInt(this._shadow.getHeight()) + parseInt(this.textarea.getStyle('lineHeight').replace('px', '')), this.options.get('min_height')) + 'px'
});
// Keep the text/character count inside the limits:
if($F(this.textarea).length > this.options.get('max_length')){
text = $F(this.textarea).substring(0, this.options.get('max_length'));
this.textarea.value = text;
return false;
}
var remaining = this.options.get('max_length') - $F(this.textarea).length;
this._remainingCharacters.update(Math.abs(remaining) + ' characters remaining'));
}
});
#memical had an awesome solution for setting the height of the textarea on pageload with jQuery, but for my application I wanted to be able to increase the height of the textarea as the user added more content. I built off memical's solution with the following:
$(document).ready(function() {
var $textarea = $("p.body textarea");
$textarea.css("height", ($textarea.attr("scrollHeight") + 20));
$textarea.keyup(function(){
var current_height = $textarea.css("height").replace("px", "")*1;
if (current_height + 5 <= $textarea.attr("scrollHeight")) {
$textarea.css("height", ($textarea.attr("scrollHeight") + 20));
}
});
});
It's not very smooth but it's also not a client-facing application, so smoothness doesn't really matter. (Had this been client-facing, I probably would have just used an auto-resize jQuery plugin.)
For those that are coding for IE and encounter this problem. IE has a little trick that makes it 100% CSS.
<TEXTAREA style="overflow: visible;" cols="100" ....></TEXTAREA>
You can even provide a value for rows="n" which IE will ignore, but other browsers will use. I really hate coding that implements IE hacks, but this one is very helpful. It is possible that it only works in Quirks mode.
Internet Explorer, Safari, Chrome and Opera users need to remember to explicidly set the line-height value in CSS. I do a stylesheet that sets the initial properites for all text boxes as follows.
<style>
TEXTAREA { line-height: 14px; font-size: 12px; font-family: arial }
</style>
Here is a function I just wrote in jQuery to do it - you can port it to Prototype, but they don't support the "liveness" of jQuery so elements added by Ajax requests will not respond.
This version not only expands, but it also contracts when delete or backspace is pressed.
This version relies on jQuery 1.4.2.
Enjoy ;)
http://pastebin.com/SUKeBtnx
Usage:
$("#sometextarea").textareacontrol();
or (any jQuery selector for example)
$("textarea").textareacontrol();
It was tested on Internet Explorer 7/Internet Explorer 8, Firefox 3.5, and Chrome. All works fine.
Using ASP.NET, just simply do this:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head>
<title>Automatic Resize TextBox</title>
<script type="text/javascript">
function setHeight(txtarea) {
txtarea.style.height = txtdesc.scrollHeight + "px";
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<form id="form1" runat="server">
<asp:TextBox ID="txtarea" runat= "server" TextMode="MultiLine" onkeyup="setHeight(this);" onkeydown="setHeight(this);" />
</form>
</body>
</html>

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