4

I want all elements that are links to show consistent behavior.

 a:hover { opacity: 0.5; }

This works in IE and Firefox, but the opacity (and associated CSS transition) is not properly applied to the child elements of the <a> tag in Chrome and Safari. If I add an explicit rule for a <div> as a child element, it works in Chrome and Safari:

 a:hover, a:hover div { opacity: 0.5; }

So far so good, and this has been asked and answered before. The problem that I have is that by adding the rule for the containing <div>, the opacity gets applied twice in IE and Firefox, making the element too transparent.

I need to cover both scenarios - <a> wrapping a <div> or not, without writing lots of explicit CSS rules. How can I do that?

http://liveweave.com/fMsz7m

2 Answers 2

4

What worked for me in Safari was adding display: block into the a tag

a:hover {                       
  opacity: 0.5;
  transition:  opacity 0.2s ease;
  display: block;
}
3

I'm not sure whether this counts as a direct solution to your question (I'm not sure why the children aren't inheriting), but you can add display: block to the a in your css which will work (tested with Firefox and Chrome).

JSFiddle DEMO

An alternative is to assign the hover to your <div>, parent of <a>.

JSFiddle DEMO

I feel as though there are better solutions/explanations out there, maybe this one will spark an idea for someone else.

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