To target elements only in IE browsers i'll use
IE6:
* html #nav li ul {
left: -39px !important;
border: 1px solid red;
}
IE7:
*+html #nav li ul {
left: -39px! important;
}
Does anyone know how to target IE8?
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To target elements only in IE browsers i'll use IE6:
IE7:
Does anyone know how to target IE8? |
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2013 update: IE10+ no longer supports conditional comments. Original answer: Some people seem to be confused because this does not answer the letter of the question, only the spirit - so for clarification: There is no such thing as a browser selector. There are hacks that take advantage of bugs and/or glitches in specific browsers' CSS parsers, but relying on these are setting yourself up for failure. There is a standard, accepted way to deal with this: Use conditional comments to target IE only. Example:
Everything inside the two |
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I'm not going to get in a debate about whether or not this method should be used, but this will let you set specific css attributes for IE8-9 only (note: it is not a selector, so a bit different than what you asked): Use '\0/' after each css declaration, so:
And to build off another answer, you can do this to assign variou styles to IE6, IE7, and IE8:
source: http://dimox.net/personal-css-hacks-for-ie6-ie7-ie8/ |
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Take a look at these:
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This question is ancient but.. Right after the opening body tag..
Right before the closing body tag..
CSS..
You could do this for all IE browsers using conditional statements, OR target ALL browsers by encapsulating all content in a div with browser name + version server-side |
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you can use like this. it's better than
div.foo { color: inherit;} .ie7 div.foo { color: #ff8000; } |
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CSS style only for IE8:
Only IE8 will be Red. first Blue: for all browsers. Red: IE6,7,8 Only Second Blue: IE6,7 Only So Red = for IE8 only. For a very complete summary of browser hacks (including Internet Explorer (IE), Safari, Chrome, iPhone, and Opera) visit this link: http://paulirish.com/2009/browser-specific-css-hacks/ |
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Building upon image72's excellent answer, you could actually have advanced CSS selectors like this:
so that in your css you can do this:
This is great because:
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I have a solution that I use only when I have to, after I build my html & css valid and working in most browsers, I do the occasional hack with this amazing piece of javascript from Rafael Lima. http://rafael.adm.br/css_browser_selector/ It keeps my CSS & HTML valid and clean, I know it's not the ideal solution, using javascript to fix hacks, but as long as your code is originally as close as possible (silly IE just breaks things sometimes) then moving something a few px with javascript isn't as big of a deal as some people think. Plus for time/cost reasons is a quick & easy fix. |
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I realize this is an old question but it was the first result on Google when I searched and I think I have found a better solution than the highest ranked suggestion and what the OP chose to do.
So technically this is the opposite of what the OP wanted, but that just means you have to apply the rule you want for IE8 first and then apply this for everything else. Of course you can put anything inside the () as long as it is valid css that doesn't actually select anything. IE8 chokes on this line and doesn't apply it, but previous IEs (ok I only checked IE7, I have stopped caring about IE6), just ignore the :not() and do apply the declarations. And of course every other browser (I tested Safari 5, Opera 10.5, Firefox 3.6) applies that css as you would expect. So this solution, I guess like any other pure CSS solution would assume that if the IE developers add support for the :not selector then they will also fix what ever discrepancy was causing you to target IE8. |
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In the ASP.NET world, I've tended to use the built-in BrowserCaps feature to write out a set of classes onto the body tag that enable you to target any combination of browser and platform. So in pre-render, I would run something like this code (assuming you give your tag an ID and make it runat the server):
This code enables you to then target a specific browser in your CSS like this:
We create a sub-class of System.Web.UI.MasterPage and make sure all of our master pages inherit from our specialised MasterPage so that every page gets these classes added on for free. If you're not in an ASP.NET environment, you could use jQuery which has a browser plugin that dynamically adds similar class names on page-load. This method has the benefit of removing conditional comments from your markup, and also of keeping both your main styles and your browser-specific styles in roughly the same place in your CSS files. It also means your CSS is more future-proof (since it doesn't rely on bugs that may be fixed) and helps your CSS code make much more sense since you only have to see
Instead of
or worse! |
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OK so, it isn't css hack, but out of frustration for not being able to find ways to target ie8 from css, and due to policy of not having ie specific css files, I had to do following, which I assume someone else might find useful:
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This guy saved my day: |
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\9 doesn’t work with font-family, instead you’d need to use “\0/ !important” as Chris mentioned above, for example:
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