CSS Specific for Internet Explorer

As much as we don’t like to deal with the IE bugs, we still have to face it because your boss and visitors are still using Explorer. It gets frustrating when different versions of Explorer displays web pages differently due to the inconsistent rendering engine. We typically use IE conditional comments to fix the IE […]

CSS3 Solutions for Internet Explorer

Experienced developers understand that CSS3 can be added to new projects with progressive enhancement in mind. This ensures that content is accessible while non-supportive browsers fall back to a less-enhanced experience for the user. But developers could face a situation where a client insists that the enhancements work cross-browser, demanding support even for IE6. In […]

9 Most Common IE Bugs and How to Fix Them

Internet Explorer – the bane of most web developers’ existence. Up to 60% of your development can be wasted just trying to squash out IE specific bugs which isn’t really a productive use of your time. In this tutorial, you are going to learn about the most common IE bugs and rendering disparities and how […]

Visual Cheat Sheet: CSS Compatibility with Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8

This Visual Cheat Sheet will help you to understand CSS (2.1 and 3) behavior in Internet Explorer’s earlier (IE6 and IE7) and recent (IE8) versions. This cheat sheet (2 pages) contains some important CSS reference like… At rules (@rule), Element Selectors, Attribute Selectors, Pseudo-classes, Border and Layout, Position, Font and Text etc.

CSS Differences in Internet Explorer 6, 7 and 8

This article will attempt to provide an exhaustive, easy-to-use reference for developers desiring to know the differences in CSS support for IE6, IE7 and IE8. This reference contains brief descriptions and compatibility for: Any item that is supported by one of the three browser versions, but not the other two Any item that is supported […]

IE8 Rendering Modes: One Meta Tag to Rule Them All

You’ve mastered doctypes, now it’s time to get control over the new kid on the block in the browser rendering space. Internet Explorer 8 is gaining traction and is actually the first browser to extend – and in many ways replace – the doctype standards/quirks switch. With a single line of code – one meta […]