Canvas is stretched when using CSS but normal with "width" / "height" properties
It seems that the width
and height
attributes determine the width or height of the canvas’s coordinate system, whereas the CSS properties just determine the size of the box in which it will be shown.
This is explained in the HTML specification:
The
canvas
element has two attributes to control the size of the element’s bitmap:width
andheight
. These attributes, when specified, must have values that are valid non-negative integers. The rules for parsing non-negative integers must be used to obtain their numeric values. If an attribute is missing, or if parsing its value returns an error, then the default value must be used instead. Thewidth
attribute defaults to 300, and theheight
attribute defaults to 150.
To set the width
and height
you need, you may use
canvasObject.setAttribute('width', '475');
For <canvas>
elements, the CSS rules for width
and height
set the actual size of the canvas element that will be drawn to the page. On the other hand, the HTML attributes of width
and height
set the size of the coordinate system or 'grid' that the canvas API will use.
For example, consider this (jsfiddle):
var ctx = document.getElementById('canvas1').getContext('2d');
ctx.fillStyle = "red";
ctx.fillRect(10, 10, 30, 30);
var ctx2 = document.getElementById('canvas2').getContext('2d');
ctx2.fillStyle = "red";
ctx2.fillRect(10, 10, 30, 30);
canvas {
border: 1px solid black;
}
<canvas id="canvas1" style="width: 50px; height: 100px;" height="50" width="100"></canvas>
<canvas id="canvas2" style="width: 100px; height: 100px;" height="50" width="100"></canvas>
Both have had the same thing drawn on them relative to the internal coordinates of the canvas element. But in the second canvas, the red rectangle will be twice as wide because the canvas as a whole is being stretched across a bigger area by the CSS rules.
Note: If the CSS rules for width
and/or height
aren't specified then the browser will use the HTML attributes to size the element such that 1 unit of these values equals 1px on the page. If these attributes aren't specified then they will default to a width
of 300
and a height
of 150
.
The canvas will be stretched if you set the width and height in your CSS. If you want to dynamically manipulate the dimension of the canvas you have to use JavaScript like so:
canvas = document.getElementById('canv');
canvas.setAttribute('width', '438');
canvas.setAttribute('height', '462');
The browser uses the css width and height, but the canvas element scales based on the canvas width and height. In javascript, read the css width and height and set the canvas width and height to that.
var myCanvas = $('#TheMainCanvas');
myCanvas[0].width = myCanvas.width();
myCanvas[0].height = myCanvas.height();