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I am pulling my hair out on this one.

We're just about done with the development of an overhaul to our site. As a last step, we're trying to wrap up all the glyphs and icons into a sprite. They're all transparent .png's so the sprite is too. It appears that if a background comes from a sptire, IE distorts it. If it comes from the original file, it does not. FF and Chrome are fine either way.

I am looking at the orignal image and the sprited version side-by-side with grids to see that the pixels are identical. I have counted the pixels in the sprite many times to ensure I'm using the right coordinates. My CSS looks like this:

XXbackground: url(sprite.png) no-repeat 0px -837px; /* lozRedRedSpacer */
background: url(lozRedRedSpacer.png) no-repeat;

The 'XX' lets me toggle back and forth. With the single-file version, it looks perfect: seperate file background. The sprite-version looks like this: sprite. It looks like it is 'squished' both vertically and horizontally. This does not happen in FF or Chrome.

Any ideas?

EDIT I was able to strip out most of the noise and post an example here. I've added notes to the example to describe my problem.

Thank you so much for taking the time to look at this!

UPDATE We've since replaced these 'overlapped divider images' with CSS pseudo-classes that REALLY do overlap and the zooming issue seems to have gone away. Of course now we have new problems - IE8 gets the z-order wrong and IE7 doesn't understand psuedo-elements at all. But at least the markup is simpler and the zooming issue is gone.

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    To me, that looks less "squished" and more like a one-pixel offset along both axes. Having a zero-pixel x-offset doesn't agree with that, but it's probably worth double-checking your sprite math, if you haven't already.
    – Ben Blank
    Feb 4, 2011 at 18:55
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    Can you get a working example that shows up the problem, somewhere like jsfiddle.net, say? It's odd; it looks like something's adding a bevel effect somehow. Feb 4, 2011 at 19:32
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    Oh my - I found it! My eyes really suck so I usually run IE at 125% zoom. Turn off zoom, and it looks and acts perfectly!
    – n8wrl
    Feb 7, 2011 at 14:48
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    Please answer your own question and mark as answered for others in the future with the same problem.
    – mylesagray
    Feb 8, 2011 at 13:11
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    @n8wrl - well, I'm trying to build a website, I can't tell my users "please don't zoom on IE7-8" :)
    – ripper234
    Oct 31, 2011 at 19:28

1 Answer 1

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It turns out my problem was caused by IE's 'zoom' feature. Without any zoom, everything looks great like the other browsers. Even 150% or 200% looks good. But 125%, where I had it, causes this distortion. It happens in IE7 and IE8.

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    Thanks. I found this same issue on IE 9. I zoomed to 100% and the problem went away. Why oh why can't Microsoft get it right! Why don't they just use webkit and give up on making their own browsers and save developers hassles and headaches and make the entire web move forward.
    – ATL_DEV
    Apr 13, 2012 at 21:25

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