line-height v0.3.1
line-height 
Calculate line-height of an HTML element (IE6 compatible)
This was created for provide a well-tested module for calculating line-height in pixels for trunkata, a line-based truncation library for HTML.
Getting Started
line-height is available via the following:
- npm,
npm install line-height - bower,
bower install line-height - component,
component install line-height - Download via HTTP
For npm and component, you can load it in as follows:
var lineHeight = require('line-height');For bower and http, you can use vanilla JS
<script src="components/line-height.js"></script>
window.lineHeight; // `line-height` is defined on `window` in camelCaseor you can use AMD
require(['line-height'], funtion (lineHeight) { /* code */ });or CommonJS syntax (see npm/component section).
Once you have the module loaded, you can get the line-height of any node in the DOM.
// Calculate the `line-height` of the body
lineHeight(document.body); // 19
// Calculate the `line-height` of an h2
var h2 = document.createElement('h2');
document.body.appendChild(h2);
lineHeight(h2); // 29
// Calculate how many lines tall an element is
var div = document.createElement('div');
div.innerHTML = '<p>1</p><p>2</p>';
(lineHeight(div) / div.offsetHeight); // 2, how trunkata performs its calculationsDonations
Support this project and others by twolfson via donations
Documentation
line-height provides a single function.
lineHeight(node);
/**
* Calculate the `line-height` of a given node
* @param {HTMLElement} node Element to calculate line height of. Must be in the DOM.
* @returns {Number} `line-height` of the element in pixels
*/Solved problems
line-height: normal
In a large amount of browsers, the computed style for an element's line-height is normal by default.
If it is specified by any other means (e.g. ancestor has a line-height or the element has a line-height specified), it is either a CSS length.
To solve this problem, we create a vanilla element of the same nodeName (e.g. h2 if it is an h2), apply the original element's font-size, and return the element offsetHeight. This is the height of 1 line of the element (i.e. line-height).
Converting pt, pc, in, cm, mm to px
In most browsers, when the line-height is specified in pt, pc, in, cm or mm, the computedStyle value is in the same unit.
To solve this problem, we use the standard ratios of conversion to pixels to make a conversion to pixels.
- 3pt to 4px
- 1pc to 16px
- 1in to 96px
- 2.54cm to 96px
- 25.4mm to 96px
numeric font-size in IE6
In IE6, numeric font-sizes (e.g. font-size: 2.3) are returned without a unit.
To solve this problem, we treat this number as an em since it is relative as well. To do that, we set the element's style to "numeric value" + "em", compute and save the font-size, remove the temporary style. This conversion gives us the unit in pt which we know how to deal with from before.
Development
Testing
Tests can be run once via:
npm test
# Or with Karma directly via
# npm run test-karma-singleTests can also be run continuously via:
npm run test-karma-singleContributing
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint via npm run lint and test via npm test.
License
Copyright (c) 2013 Todd Wolfson
Licensed under the MIT license.