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I'm using the following CSS rules to do a transformation on a simple H2 element, only text inside it:

-moz-transform: matrix(0, -1, 1, 0, 130px, 118px);
-webkit-transform: matrix(0, -1, 1, 0, 130px, 118px);

It works as expected in Firefox; i doesn't work at all in Safari/Windows and Chrome/Windows: the H2 stays where it is. Am I doing something wrong or are CSS transforms not active in those two browsers under Windows?

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There is some sort of implementation, but it's definitely broken.

If I remove the px's I can get it to render at least (it doesn't seem to render with them or see it as valid CSS), but it doesnt let the screen scroll down to it like Firefox does. Point it to an location in frame though (without the px's) and it does display. Removing the px's don't seem to make any difference to the position either, which is good.

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I don't mean to be rude, but the screenshot is very small and I can't even understand what you're talking about. Sorry. – Kaze no Koe Nov 8 at 2:42
i33.tinypic.com/2nhnl7p.png - direct link to image. Basically -webkit-transform: matrix(0, -1, 1, 0, 130, 118); works -webkit-transform: matrix(0, -1, 1, 0, 130px, 118px); doesn't. I don't know why. WebKit also assumes that the last two parameters are pixels, so you get the same rendering as Firefox. – blake Nov 8 at 8:20
OH! OK thanks a lot! – Kaze no Koe Nov 9 at 9:37

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