CSS-d,
I got some code from the "CSS3 Please" web site:
http://css3please.com/
For the box-shadow effect, it indicates that it can be used in IE 6, 7,
and 8. However, when I look at it with my windows machine, which has
IE8, it doesn't work. The box shadow is rendered like 2 pixel wide
border on
On 3/28/10 8:59 PM, Dave M G wrote:
> CSS-d,
>
> I got some code from the "CSS3 Please" web site:
>
> http://css3please.com/
>
> For the box-shadow effect, it indicates that it can be used in IE 6, 7,
> and 8. However, when I look at it with my windows machine, which has
> IE8, it doesn't work. The
On Monday 29 March 2010 17:14, David Hucklesby wrote:
> On 3/28/10 8:59 PM, Dave M G wrote:
> > CSS-d,
> >
> > I got some code from the "CSS3 Please" web site:
> >
> > http://css3please.com/
> >
> > For the box-shadow effect, it indicates that it can be used in IE 6, 7,
> > and 8. However, when I l
>> Those Microsoft filters only work when the element they are applied to
>> has "layout."[1] Try adding "zoom: 1;" to the ruleset for the filter...
> I understood 'zoom' to be a Microsoft proprietary CSS property which does not
> validate. I would set a height or width value instead which achieve
On Mar 29, 2010, at 12:59 PM, Dave M G wrote:
> http://css3please.com/
>
> For the box-shadow effect, it indicates that it can be used in IE 6, 7,
> and 8. However, when I look at it with my windows machine, which has
> IE8, it doesn't work. The box shadow is rendered like 2 pixel wide
> border
Dave, David:
this is going to become obsolete with version 9 of IE, which will
support most of the CSS3 Color module.
bye,
ps. check out on MSDN blog.
On Mar 29, 2010, at 7:14 AM, David Hucklesby wrote:
> On 3/28/10 8:59 PM, Dave M G wrote:
>> CSS-d,
>>
>> I got some code from the "CSS3 Please