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Well I am looking for a complete definitive CSS3 Animation spec so that I am limited by those mentioned in tutorials for Dummies. Whenever I search the internet I only come across various tutorials and guides.

I am looking for the authentic CSS3 animations specification document used by WebKit and Mozilla for their implementations which covers all the possibilities in their browsers.

What I understand is that Mozilla and WebKit have their own tags and the standard is still not accepted, so maybe they have their own documents. Any pointers to the authentic documentation?

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2 Answers 2

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Transitions specification:

Animations specification

All the other links posted above (e.g. MDN links, Webkit blog links) are NOT specifications, but more like tutorials.

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  • sure, but the OP was asking for the document used by WebKit and Mozilla for their implementations. Until the standards are standardised and followed by the browsers, their own documentation is the closest we have. Oct 22, 2011 at 10:20
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    Not really. If Moz and Webkit do something that's opposed to the above W3 specs, you can report it to them as a bug and they will accept and fix it, even if the spec is still in WD.
    – Lea Verou
    Oct 22, 2011 at 15:18
  • really? Don’t specs ever change during the working draft stage? Oct 23, 2011 at 19:39
  • Yes, that's why implementations are prefixed, because they change as the specs develop.
    – Lea Verou
    Oct 24, 2011 at 13:22
  • right, but they don’t usually flip-flop around that much, do they? For example, when the WebKit team changed their gradient syntax to match Mozilla’s and the spec better, they kept their existing syntax (see webkit.org/blog/1424/css3-gradients). the strategy for matching implementation with spec seems to be to wait until the spec’s agreed with other browser-makers, then implement without the prefix. Oct 24, 2011 at 13:41

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