It's not as simple as just calling WebKits getMatchedCSSRules()
, it does return the matched rules in order of priority (altho I've seen no mention of this order in the docs), but the order does not take regard to property important priority and does not include element styles. So I ended up with this function:
getMatchedStyle
function getMatchedStyle(elem, property){
// element property has highest priority
var val = elem.style.getPropertyValue(property);
// if it's important, we are done
if(elem.style.getPropertyPriority(property))
return val;
// get matched rules
var rules = getMatchedCSSRules(elem);
// iterate the rules backwards
// rules are ordered by priority, highest last
for(var i = rules.length; i --> 0;){
var r = rules[i];
var important = r.style.getPropertyPriority(property);
// if set, only reset if important
if(val == null || important){
val = r.style.getPropertyValue(property);
// done if important
if(important)
break;
}
}
return val;
}
Example
Given the following code and style rules:
<div class="b">div 1</div>
<div id="a" class="a d2">div 2</div>
<div id="b" class="b d3" style="width: 333px;">div 3</div>
<div id="c" class="c d4" style="width: 44em;">div 4</div>
<style>
div { width: 100px; }
.d3 { width: auto !important; }
div#b { width: 80%; }
div#c.c { width: 444px; }
x, div.a { width: 50%; }
.a { width: 75%; }
</style>
this JS code
var d = document.querySelectorAll('div');
for(var i = 0; i < d.length; ++i){
console.log("div " + (i+1) + ": " + getMatchedStyle(d[i], 'width'));
}
gives the following widths for the div
s:
div 1: 100px
div 2: 50%
div 3: auto
div 4: 44em
(At jsFiddle)
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