Why the following fallback for IE color: red; does not work ?
In IE7, the color is black rather than red.
Live demo here
HTML:
<div>
<span>Hello</span>
</div>
CSS:
div {
width: 200px;
height: 100px;
background-color: blue;
text-align: center;
}
span {
font-size: 2em;
color: red;
color: rgba(250, 250, 97, 0.9);
}
3rd party edit
The mozilla mdn on css color lists the different options for color: value
- CSS 2 specification:
color: <value>and value can be a keywordredorrgb(255,0,0) - CSS Color Module Level 3 (Recommendation 2017-12) added SVG colors, the rgba(), hsl(), and hsla() functions for example:
rgba(0,0,0,0)
RGBA is not supported in IE.
However, as it sees your color: style, it attempts to evaluate it and reverts to the default color (#00000000).
You could use an IE specific hack here, such as
But, assuming that you are trying to affect only the background color, and not the opacity of the entire element, you’re best off with a filter that sets the desired rgba value as the start and end color of a gradient – creating an rgba background.
But remember – IE assumes that the Alpha is first, not last, so don’t just convert and copy your values.
The double filter is for IE6 and IE7 respectively.
http://css-tricks.com/rgba-browser-support/