noupe.com — Many time-saving rules are being thought up for CSS3: text-shadow, box-sizing, opacity, multiple backgrounds, border-radius, border-image ,multi-column layout, etc…In this post we will take a look at some interesting properties of CSS3 that you can put into practice in your website designs today.
May 21, 2009 View in Crawl 4
cjw314May 22, 2009
What's your best guess?
kateharpMay 22, 2009
great!
2blatheMay 22, 2009
hoorah! only 2 more years until we can use them. wheeee....
2blatheMay 22, 2009
probably not as much the users fault as you might think -- corporations that employ millions typically are still running legacy internal apps that only run correctly on ie6, upgrading these systems is probably in the billions of dollars. ie6 will be around for 2 more years at the least.joy.
7m7ufMay 22, 2009
@2blatheThat's my situation. My place of work will not allow anyone to upgrade past 6 -- but i installed chrome, firefox and safari -- so far i'm using chrome a lot at work and firefox mostly at home. Safari i like to use when reviewing the webpages i make -- that text renderer they use is damn nice.
svivianMay 22, 2009
Damn right, no more nesting 5 divs just to make a box with rounded corners, border and shadow.
kierucomMay 22, 2009
For all the IE haters... yeah IE doesn't support all of this yet; but then in truth neither does Firefox, Chrome, or Safari. Those clever little things like -webkit and -moz ... those aren't 'true' CSS tags. Those are basically placeholder tags to allow developers to play with the technology before it becomes truly supported.So when you see it say "Does not work in IE" that just means IE isn't using WebKit of Mozilla engines. No surprise there.
sargodaryaMay 28, 2009
Alright. You know what I love about this? HOW MANY BROWSERS WILL BE ABLE TO DISPLAY THIS FULLY?!