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Home/ Questions/Q 4271520
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 21, 20262026-05-21T07:27:12+00:00 2026-05-21T07:27:12+00:00

I would like to get a gradient in CSS (perhaps through Compass ) that

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I would like to get a gradient in CSS (perhaps through Compass) that works in every major browser, including IE7+. Is there an easy way to do this (without writing a lot of code, and without a custom image file)?

I looked at Compass’s gradient mixin, but it does not work with Internet Explorer.

Any ideas? (It does not need to be Compass — I am happy install something else.)

Edit: What I am trying to get is some framework (like Compass?) that generates code like what Blowsie posted that’s been tested across browsers. Basically like the Compass gradient mixin I mentioned, but with IE support. (I am a bit wary of just rolling my own SCSS mixin and pasting in blocks like Blowsie’s code, because I haven’t tested it and do not have the resources to do so.)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-21T07:27:13+00:00Added an answer on May 21, 2026 at 7:27 am

    I just noticed that the current Compass beta (0.11.beta.6) has support for generating IE gradients in the compass/css3/images module (which supersedes the previous gradient module), so you can generate your gradients with a total of two short commands:

    @import "compass/css3/images";
    @import "compass/utilities/general/hacks";  /* filter-gradient needs this */
    
    .whatever {
      /* IE; docs say this should go first (or better, placed in separate IE-only stylesheet): */
      @include filter-gradient(#aaaaaa, #eeeeee);
      /* Fallback: */
      background: #cccccc;
      /* CSS 3 plus vendor prefixes: */
      @include background(linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa, #eeeeee));
    }
    

    This generates the following slew of CSS:

    .whatever {
      *zoom: 1;
      -ms-filter: "progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(gradientType=0, startColorstr='#FFAAAAAA', endColorstr='#FFEEEEEE')";
      filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(gradientType=0, startColorstr='#FFAAAAAA', endColorstr='#FFEEEEEE');
      background: #cccccc;
      background: -webkit-gradient(linear, 50% 0%, 50% 100%, color-stop(0%, #aaaaaa), color-stop(100%, #eeeeee));
      background: -moz-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa, #eeeeee);
      background: -o-linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa, #eeeeee);
      background: linear-gradient(top, #aaaaaa, #eeeeee);
    }
    

    I guess I would have preferred to have the IE and non-IE gradient code in one call, but since IE’s DXImageTransform gradient function is pretty limited, that is probably not possible.

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