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logical-everywhere
Advanced tools
Collection of utilities to work around features that are not fully compatible with logical properties and values (such as translateX, translateY or getBoundingClientRect).
Collection of utilities to work around features that are not fully compatible with logical properties and values (such as translateX
, translateY
or getBoundingClientRect
).
When positioning elements with JS, it is difficult to work with logical properties and values in mind. For example, if I want to display a tooltip in the block-start
direction of an element (usually physically above), I first need to know where the inline and block axes are located in order to then position the tooltip in the correct physical direction (top
, left
, bottom
or right
):
This package aims to simplifies this process.
npm i --save logical-everywhere
getBoundingClientLogicalRect
Same as getBoundingClientRect
, but returns a LogicalDOMRect
, which includes logical properties (inlineStart
, inlineEnd
, blockStart
, blockEnd
, inlineSize
and blockSize
) in addition to the non-logical properties (width
, left
etc.).
const myElement = document.getElementById('my-element');
const rect = getBoundingClientLogicalRect(myElement);
console.log(rect.blockSize); // corresponds to rect.height (in normal conditions)
console.log(rect.inlineStart); // corresponds to rect.left (in normal conditions)
getPhysicalDirection
Get the physical direction that corresponds to the logical direction of a element.
const myElement = document.getElementById('my-element');
const physicalDirection = getPhysicalDirection(myElement, 'inline-start');
console.log(physicalDirection); // prints "left" (in normal conditions)
getPhysicalFlexAxes
Get flexbox's main- and cross-axis as physical axes.
const myElement = document.getElementById('my-element');
myElement.style.flexDirection = 'row-reverse';
const axesRR = getPhysicalFlexAxes(myElement);
console.log(axesRR.main); // prints "right-left" (in normal conditions)
myElement.style.flexDirection = 'column-reverse';
const axesCR = getPhysicalFlexAxes(myElement);
console.log(axesCR.main); // prints "bottom-top" (in normal conditions)
getElementAxes
Get inline- and block-axis of a HTML element.
const myElement = document.getElementById('my-element');
const { block, inline } = getElementAxes(myElement);
console.log(inline); // prints "left-right" (in normal conditions)
console.log(block); // prints "top-bottom" (in normal conditions)
axisDimensionAndDirection
Get dimension and direction of a physical axis.
This is especially useful when trying to calculate a dynamic translateX
/ translateY
.
const myElement = document.getElementById('my-element');
const { inline } = getElementAxes(myElement);
const { dimension, multiplier } = axisDimensionAndDirection(inline);
// Translate 3rem in inline-end direction.
const transform = `translate${dimension.toUpperCase()}(${3 * multiplier}rem)`;
// use -3 instead of 3 to translate to the inline-start direction
axisStartEnd
Get start- and end-direction of a physical axis.
const { start, end } = axisStartEnd('top-bottom');
console.log(start); // prints "top"
console.log(end); // prints "bottom"
reverseAxis
Reverse a physical axis
const reversed = reverseAxis('top-bottom');
console.log(reversed); // prints "bottom-top"
FAQs
Collection of utilities to work around features that are not fully compatible with logical properties and values (such as translateX, translateY or getBoundingClientRect).
The npm package logical-everywhere receives a total of 13 weekly downloads. As such, logical-everywhere popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that logical-everywhere demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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