I often find myself needing to calculate the horizontal center and vertical center of an element.
One example is a popover.
To position the popover perfectly, I need to know the horizontal and vertical centers of the button that triggers the popover. Here's one example of a calculation I had to make.
Another example: When I built this spinning pacman, I need to get the center of the pacman to calculate the angle of rotation.
:::note
I taught people how to build these two things step-by-step in Learn JavaScript. You may find it helpful if you want to learn to build things from scratch.
:::
Getting the horizontal and vertical centers
It's easy to get both the horizontal and vertical centers.
First, we use getBoundingClientRect
to get information about the bounding box.
- To get the horizontal center (which I call
xCenter
), we use the average of theleft
andright
values from this bounding box. - To get the vertical center (which I call
yCenter
), we use the average of thetop
andbottom
values of the bounding box.
const box = element.getBoundingClientRect()
const xCenter = (box.left + box.right) / 2
const yCenter = (box.top + box.bottom) / 2
Function to simplify everything
I made a function to streamline this calculation. I call it getBoundingBox
. It returns all values getBoundingClientRect
plus xCenter
and yCenter
.
The function look like this:
function getBoundingBox (element) {
const box = element.getBoundingClientRect()
const ret = { }
// Loops through all DomRect properties.
// Cannot spread because they're not enumerable.
for (const prop in box) {
ret[prop] = box[prop]
}
ret.xCenter = (box.left + box.right) / 2
ret.yCenter = (box.top + box.bottom) / 2
return ret
}
Using it:
const box = getBoundingBox(element)
const { xCenter, yCenter } = box
Thanks for reading. This article was originally posted on my blog. Sign up for my newsletter if you want more articles to help you become a better frontend developer.