Get Element Dimensions After CSS Transform

By  on  

I've been playing a lot with meta viewports recently due to seeing many HTML5 TV apps coded explicitly for 1280x720 which you'll see on many HD televisions.  We all know that it's a much better practice to use responsive design than hardcode dimensions but, that aside, meta viewports are meant to do the scaling.  So it's CSS transforms, specifically scale(), to the rescue.

In creating a meta viewport shim, I needed to calculate an element's dimensions after it had been scaled.  Properties like clientWidth and innerWidth will return the element's original width, ignoring the transform.  To get the scaled size you must use getBoundingClientRect:

var originalWidth = myElement.innerWidth; // 1280
var originalHeight = myElement.innerHeight; // 720

originalElement.style.transform = 'scale(1.5)';

console.log(originalElement.getBoundingClientRect());

/*
ClientRect {
  bottom: 1080
  height: 1080
  left: 0
  right: 1920
  top: 0
  width: 1920
}
*/

The example above sets the scale and returns different desired height and width dimensions based on the scale.  getBoundingClientRect returns more than just height and width by position coordinates as well.

I was worried I wouldn't be able to accomplish this feat but getBoundingClientRect was the perfect solution!

Recent Features

  • By
    Animated 3D Flipping Menu with CSS

    CSS animations aren't just for basic fades or sliding elements anymore -- CSS animations are capable of much more.  I've showed you how you can create an exploding logo (applied with JavaScript, but all animation is CSS), an animated Photo Stack, a sweet...

  • By
    Designing for Simplicity

    Before we get started, it's worth me spending a brief moment introducing myself to you. My name is Mark (or @integralist if Twitter happens to be your communication tool of choice) and I currently work for BBC News in London England as a principal engineer/tech...

Incredible Demos

  • By
    Scroll IFRAMEs on iOS

    For the longest time, developers were frustrated by elements with overflow not being scrollable within the page of iOS Safari.  For my blog it was particularly frustrating because I display my demos in sandboxed IFRAMEs on top of the article itself, so as to not affect my site's...

  • By
    Google Font API

    Google recently debuted a new web service called the Font API.  Google's Font API provides developers a means by which they may quickly and painlessly add custom fonts to their website.  Let's take a quick look at the ways by which the Google Font...

Discussion

  1. Hello, David,

    I want to remind you, that only Gecko is adding height and width as can be read in the note at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/getBoundingClientRect#Return_value.

    Compare it to MSDN: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms536433%28VS.85%29.aspx

    So your solution is not cross-browser-compatible.

    I’d look for whether jQuery can solve it and then inspect their solution ;-)

  2. This is a good solution but it has limited application. I guess we need to work a bit more on looking for answers that may be applied to multiple scenarios instead of specific ones.

  3. Dan

    This might be a very simple question but wondered if you could help.

    Is it possible to calculate the scale factor based on the height and width of an element, I think its the math I’m struggling with.

    If I know my element is 1280 x 720 to begin with …

    … and after scaling the element I know the dimensions are: 1920 x 1080

    How do I calculate the scale (1.5)?

  4. Ben

    Dan, it’s just “1920 / 1280 = 1.5”, or “1080 / 720 = 1.5”. The scale is just the ratio between the height of one to the height of the other, or the width of one to the width of the other.

Wrap your code in <pre class="{language}"></pre> tags, link to a GitHub gist, JSFiddle fiddle, or CodePen pen to embed!