Here is my angular2 code.
Template
<div #picker class="slider">
<div class="slider-track">
<div #sliderSelectionEl class="slider-selection"></div>
<div #sliderHandle1 class="slider-handle"></div>
<div #sliderHandle2 class="slider-handle"></div>
</div>
<div #tooltipEl class="tooltip">
<div class="tooltip-arrow"></div>
<div #tooltipInner class="tooltip-inner"></div>
</div>
<input type="text" class="span2" value="" id="sl2"><br/>
</div>
Component
import {Component, OnInit, Input, ViewChild, ElementRef, Renderer} from '@angular/core'; export class SliderComponent implements OnInit { @ViewChild('picker') picker: ElementRef; constructor(private renderer: Renderer, private el: ElementRef) { } ngAfterViewInit() { this.renderer.setElementClass(this.picker.nativeElement, 'slider-horizontal', true); console.log(this.picker.nativeElement.offsetWidth); console.log(this.picker.nativeElement.offsetHeight); } }
.slider-horizontal {
width: 210px;
height: 20px;
}
The problem is the printed values are different for each time loading. I guess this issue is due to the browser have not completed loading the div. Do you know what is the solution for this?
You can detect size changes by using
MutationObserver
Probably the biggest audience for this new api are the people that write JS frameworks, [...] Another use case would be situations where you are using frameworks that manipulate the DOM and need to react to these modifications efficiently ( and without setTimeout hacks! ).
Here is how you can use it to detect changes in elements :
// select the target node
var target = document.querySelector('#some-id'); // or
// create an observer instance
var observer = new MutationObserver(function(mutations) {
mutations.forEach(function(mutation) {
console.log(mutation.type);
});
});
// configuration of the observer:
var config = { attributes: true, childList: true, characterData: true }
// pass in the target node, as well as the observer options
observer.observe(target, config);
// later, you can stop observing
observer.disconnect();
For your case, you could use it inside your ngAfterViewInit
and refresh your offsets size. You can be more specific and only detect some mutations, and only then extract your offsets.
more info :
doc: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/MutationObserver
compatibility : https://caniuse.com/#feat=mutationobserver
Demo:
var observer = new MutationObserver(function(mutations) {
mutations.forEach(function(mutation) {
console.log(mutation);
if(mutation.attributeName == 'class') // detect class change
/*
or if(mutation.target.clientWidth == myWidth)
*/
showOffset(mutation.target);
observer.disconnect();
});
});
var config = { attributes: true}
var demoDiv = document.getElementById('demoDiv');
var logs = document.getElementById('logs');
// wait for document state to be complete
if (document.readyState === "complete") {
ngAfterViewInit();
}
document.onreadystatechange = function () {
if (document.readyState === "complete") {
ngAfterViewInit();
}
}
// observe changes that effects demoDiv + add class
function ngAfterViewInit(){
observer.observe(demoDiv, config);
demoDiv.classList.add('slider-horizontal');
}
// show offsetWidth + height.
// N.B offset width and height will be bigger than clientWidth because I added a border. If you remove the border you'll see 220px,20px
function showOffset(element){
offsetMessage = "offsetWidth:" + demoDiv.offsetWidth + " offsetHeight: " + demoDiv.offsetHeight;
console.log(offsetMessage);
logs.innerHTML = offsetMessage;
}
.slider-horizontal {
border: 2px solid red;
width: 210px;
height: 20px;
background: grey;
}
<div id='demoDiv'> I am a demo div </div>
<div style="margin-top: 20px;"> logs : <span id='logs' style=" padding: 5px; border: 1px solid black"></span></div>
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