Mike's answer will be: none of the above. He's working on a solution
that does not alter the web page.
jjb

On May 23, 2:50 pm, shabba <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks Mike,
>
> So using the getBoundingClientRect, isit a better idea to apply a
> style to that element or to create a new element that sits on top of
> it? If its the later I take its just absolute positioning right?
>
> On May 23, 11:20 am, Mike Ratcliffe <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> > The problem with the mouseover approach is that disabled elements do
> > not have a mouseove (in fact they also block other mouseover events).
>
> > If I was you I would use the following method:
> > 1. Track the mouse positions using onmousemove
> > 2. Use element = document.elementFromPoint(x,y) to get the element
> > from the mouse position
> > 3. Use element.getBoundingClientRect() to get the element position ...
> > this returns element.top, element.right, element.bottom, element.left
> > and in Firefox 3.5 element.width, element.height
>
> > shabba wrote:
> > > I am trying to create something similar for my own project, I want it
> > > so you can enable the inspect and then it will highlight the element,
> > > I have looked at the css, but cant figure out how it works, I would
> > > really appreciate it if someone would explain how its done.
>
> > > Full credit will be given to the firebug team for creating such a
> > > beautiful app!!
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