I have a "box" that "cuts" a piece of a "circle", which is to say there's a div that has overflow hidden with a much large div inside of it, the inner having a border-radius.
I have another div inside that circle div that is a rectangle, which animates a rotation.
<div id="clipper">
<div id="round">
<div id="meter"></div>
</div>
</div>
The fiddle can be seen here, which shows the css problem (the animation is done with JS requestAnimationFrame, but that part works fine and it's a bit verbose to show here.) This happens using native Android 4.0.4 browser: so far, it works fine everywhere else CSS3 is supported.
Any magic CSS property I can use to fix this? I've tried setting background, z-index and various 3d transform properties on the #clipper
div per other similar questions, to no avail. Oddly, it appears as though the overflow is respected on the left edge of the element only.
Edit - Partial Fix
Adding:
-webkit-transform: translateZ(0);
-moz-transform: translateZ(0);
-ms-transform: translateZ(0);
-o-transform: translateZ(0);
transform: translateZ(0);
to the #round
div fixes the overflow from the #clipper
div, however #meter
still overflows. Updated fiddle here. The meter already has a transform on it.
More information
I've tried another layout I just thought up, which does the same thing, but fixes the issue here (doesn't fix the bug, just avoids it). However, it has created a new, even more fun Android 4.0.4 issue: