I am working on Javascript code that gets the size of the browser viewport. My code works perfecty if the page has content. But my code does not work at all if the page has no content. Try the code examples above to see what I am talking about. How can I make it work regardless of whether or not the page has content?
I'd have thought this would be easy but I've been looking for hours and all I can find is info on getting the viewport size, which is normally useful but not in my situation.
In this case I need the actual browser size, including the scrollbars, toolbars, status bars etc. to get an idea of browsers which aren't maximised/full screen and how big they are, and to calculate the amount of the screen taken up by toolbars etc too.
I have a wordpress website with which I wish to provide content via an iframe on facebook.. Without using a wordpress plugin, I would like to know if I provide a function in jquery that basically says if viewport is equal to 520px then either load this css file or add this body class.. Also, if viewport is = to 520px then hide this element.. I think this can be done but after a lot of searching, I cannot seem to find a definative answer..
All my font-sizes are set as relative sizes in CSS (large, medium, small, x-small, etc). Let's say something is set in CSS to be xx-large, but a visually impaired user wants it displayed even bigger. Can a script determine an element's absolute size, *as it is being rendered by the browser*, and then increment the element's font-size in absolute terms?
I'm attempting to make a web page that adapts to the size of your browser size when it maximized. Because I'm only 15 I'm not such a great programmer or coder. I've done my best with the resources I have though (Fluent in Lua and a natural ability to pick languages syntax up quickly)
Here is what I have so far, it doesn't work and it is starting to puzzle me. As it seems correct as I look at it. I'm sorry if this question show my ignorance. I try my best to hide it.
Some of it is Copy pasted from sources on Google. But only for educational purposes, I learn off reading, examining and testing out snippets.
I'm basically trying to get the max size of the window and resize the div accordingly.
How can I change my text or font size when the user changes the browser size. Example: When the browser is maximized, the font goes to normal, when the browser window decreased, the font size is reduce.
Well after playing around a little I have created a solution that works although it appears a little chunky. The problem was finding the browser size to use the width as a variable for size conditional aspects to a site. Code:
I'm curious if it is possible to detect the browsers default font and size? Most of the posts on this topic predate Windows XP, IE 5.5, Mozilla Firefox, et al.
I've searched up and down the DOM properties, looped through most objects and collections alerting properties and values, and I can't find anything. This leads me to believe it is not possible to detect the browsers default font settings.
I'm using a little javascript to help my site's design to fit the visitor's entire browser window. Everything works great apart from one problem. If a visitor first loads the page and the browser isn't maximised, the page loads correctly BUT if the visitor then proceeds to maximize the browser, the page is still set for the minimised browser. This condition stays until the visitor goes to another section of the site or refreshes the page. When this happens, the page again loads correctly.
I would like to force a page reload whenever the browser is minimizedmaximized or is in any other way changed size. How can I do this?
I want to resize the div based on browser size, I mean when first it load I want it to fit on browser window and no scrolling bars should be appear and when I resize the browser size by dragging, it should be fix on that size.for example visit this link:I WANT THE SAME BEHAVIOR (SIZE BASED ON BROWSER) BUT USING JQUERY.
Is there a way to override the browser font size settings with javascript. Basically we want to set the text size on a page so that if someone has their browser font setting say to "large" it does not take effect.
Does jquery have an event defined for when the user changes the size of his browser window? I couldn't find one, but sometimes I don't see the forest for the trees.
I have been trying all sorts of things, but falling short... I'm trying to set up a way to detect a user's browser size and then call a specific background image accordingly...
say (for example) that BKGD1.jpg is for users who have browsers that are 1280x1024 and higher; BKGD2.jpg is for users who have browsers that are smaller than 1280x1024...
i'm even open to an option that only displays a background image if the browser is (as in the example above) 1280x1024, and just a background color if the browser is smaller than that.
I have an XHTML STRICT page which has some event listeners attached for onload and resize. I'm doing a bit of Javascript DHTML on these events. When a user changes the browser font size, the javascipt function needs to run. Although the TOPMENU DIV gets resized when the font changes size, its not a page resize so the function doesn't get run. I fixed this in IE6 by using a second function which is run onload and sets an event on the div object in the page after its been defined.
Problem is this doesn't work in Firefox.
Mozilla DOM reference says there is no resize event on a DIV so is there a work around to make it work in FIREFOX? i.e. can I force a resize event to happen on a div in firefox or is there some other event I can trap when a user changes the browser font size?
here's my js code: topmenu is what I'm trying to trap the resize event from.
I build a website with Typo3 and it works fine, except for the text size in Internet Explorer (and Opera). I tried anything from changing the CSS templates (excluding them) to changing px to pt to em and so. Finally, I think i need a Javascript that detects the browser and if it is Internet Explorer (or Opera) the textsize should be reduce by 1. It therfore should be the same like manually clicking in IE on View->text size -> smaller (default is medium).
My javascript (I just use Javascript for this single purpose) does not work/it does not do anything:
function resizeText(){ if (browserName=="Microsoft Internet Explorer") {document.body.style.fontSize = parseFloat (document.body.style.fontSize) -1 ;}}
I have a background image that auto-resizes based on browser window / screen resolution. I want my top header menu, which requires links, to act in the same way and be in roughly the same position/size based on browser window. Is this possible? In the sample below, the image is just part of the background image to give you an idea of the look I am trying to duplicate.Is there a Javascript out there that will help me or will I be stuck having to rework my design?
I have an upload file operation in the web application. UploadForm.jsp is the form, and UploadAction.jsp is the form processing. The web server is Websphere.
I have developed a vertical accordion menu and all is great except for the fact that some of the submenus are long and run beyond the bottom of the viewport. I need to detect the position of the UL, find out how many pixels are below the page fold, and lift the UL up by that many pixels so the UL does not go below the fold. The UL in question is positioned absolutely inside of a relatively positioned parent so I can easily use a negative top position to lift the UL but how do I get the number of pixels that the UL descends below the page fold?
I got a div, I'd like some code to be executed onClick, that'd move the div to the top of the viewport (not to the top of the page), kinda like a "vertical float".
Is there a way to do this? I've seen annoying menus/ advertisements that stick to the top of the window even if you scroll down.
I'm looking for an solution to find out the real vertical viewport - without the height of horizontal scrollbars.
I have two frames side by side. The left one declared 'scrolling="no"' and the right one 'scrolling="auto"'. For the left frame it is important to know if the right frame has a horizontal scrollbar and how sick it is. So I have tried to compare the viewport of both frames.
Using 'window.innerHeight', 'document.documentElement.clientHeight', 'document.body.clientHeight' or 'document.body.offsetWidth' I get the height including the scrollbars.
The same problem with two frames (rows="50%,50%) i've solved with block elements declared with a width of 100%. Comparing the offsetWidth of both, I can see if there is a scrollbar in one frame. But with frames side by side that doesn't work.
I have 50 thumbnails running vertically down the page, so that the viewer must scroll quite a bit to see them all. When a thumbnail is clicked I want to display the full size image in the middle of the viewport. Thus, the top offset of the absolute div that displays the full size picture will change depending on how far down the viewer has scrolled.
I can bind a function to the <img> tag that will set the top offset of the div where the full size images are displayed but I don't know how to get the current position of the viewport, or how to position something with respect to the viewport.
Can jQuery pull the viewport position out of the DOM and let me center something in it?
I just learned that firefox (v 1.5.0.3) chops any content of an iframe that exeeds 2^15 (=32768) pixels i.e. in height? Any idea what went wrong or is this a bug/feature?
I am using this code: <iframe src="kibo.html" style="width:400px;height:32778px;"></iframe>