CSS
Internet Explorer 10, as well as Windows Store apps using JavaScript in Windows 8, adds support for several new Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) features, including new advanced layout, visual effects, and panning and zooming capabilities. This trend began with Windows Internet Explorer 8 (full compliance with the Cascading Style Sheets, Level 2 Revision 1 (CSS2.1) standard) and continued with Windows Internet Explorer 9 (support for CSS rounded corners, multiple background images, new color models and opacity, Cascading Style Sheets, Level 3 (CSS3) Fonts and Web Open Font Format (WOFF), 2-D Transforms, Media Queries, CSS3 Namespaces, and more).
In this section
- Animations
- Backgrounds and Borders
- Exclusions
- Device Adaptation
- Fonts
- Gradients
- Grid Layout
- Hyphenation
- Media Queries and Listeners
- Multi-column Layout
- Regions
- Text shadow
- Transforms
- Transitions
API Reference
Samples and tutorials
- About Element Positioning
- About Text Rendering
- Color Table
- CSS Compatibility in Internet Explorer
- CSS Values and Units Reference
- Measuring Element Dimension and Location with CSSOM in Windows
- Printing and Style Sheets
- Understanding CSS Selectors
Internet Explorer Test Drive demos
IEBlog posts
- Moving the Stable Web Forward in IE10 Release Preview
- Sub-pixel Rendering and the CSS Object Model
- CSS 2.1 Complete: Unblocking Faster Web Standards Progress
- The CSS Corner: CSS3 Selectors
Related topics
- CSS Units of Measure: Going Beyond the Pixel
- Getting to Know CSS3 Selectors, Part 1: Structural Pseudo-Classes
- Getting to Know CSS3 Selectors, Part 2: State-Based, Target and Negation Pseudo-Classes
- Independent Composition: Rendering and Compositing in Internet Explorer 10
- Understanding CSS Selectors
Build date: 6/12/2013
