The two methods are not exactly the same thing: Translating an element will not require to change its top
, left
, right
or bottom
CSS properties, so in the same way offsetTop/offseLeft
Javascript properties are not affected by a CSS translation. Beside, the position of the element could be also static
(and thus no z-index
is required)
If you use position: relative
instead, you will change those properties to visually achieve the same effect.
Example Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/LkLey/
Of course if you have to deal with old browser (like IE8
or FF2
) the necessary choice is relative positioning, otherwise I can't see a clear convenience on choosing one of the two methods (well, to be honest relative positioning has no need of multipe prefixes -moz-
, -webkit-
... to work everywhere) so the choice is up to you (and it depends on the layout).
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