Learned something today.. it's nice to know that the filter attribute
is causing the problem and to remove it when finished with the
animation.

On Jan 12, 10:09 am, "Rick Faircloth" <r...@whitestonemedia.com>
wrote:
> Thanks for the reply, Mauricio, but I couldn't get
> your solution to work.
>
> Adding the background (at least in IE 7) didn't have any effect
> on the display of the final text.
>
> Also, on your demo page, I got an error.  Looking at the code,
> I think you've got a "no-background" class on both demo p's.
>
> Rick
>
>
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: jquery-en@googlegroups.com [mailto:jquery...@googlegroups.com] On 
> > Behalf Of Mauricio
> (Maujor) Samy
> > Silva
> > Sent: Monday, January 12, 2009 12:03 PM
> > To: jquery-en@googlegroups.com
> > Subject: [jQuery] Re: Any trick to making text at has been faded in look 
> > good?
>
> > Are you talking about Internet Explorer browser?
> > If so, have a look in the following article:
> >http://www.kevinleary.net/blog/jquery-fadein-fadeout-problems-in-inte...
>
> > Maurício
>
> > -----Mensagem Original-----
> > De: "Rick Faircloth" <r...@whitestonemedia.com>
> > Para: <jquery-en@googlegroups.com>
> > Enviada em: segunda-feira, 12 de janeiro de 2009 14:44
> > Assunto: [jQuery] Any trick to making text at has been faded in look good?
>
> > > Hi, all...
>
> > > I prefer to use .fadeIn(500), etc., to bring elements
> > > onto a page, as it gives the user a chance to keep
> > > up with changes being made visually.
>
> > > However, .fadeIn leaves text looking *u-ga-ly*... changing
> > > .fadeIn to .show leaves text nicely rendered in the browser.
>
> > > Is there some trick or other way to cause the browsers to
> > > render text that has been faded in looking good?
>
> > > Rick

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