I have a grid of all the CSS3 selectors and browser support on my blog at http://www.standardista.com/css3/css3-selector-browser-support
The values and properties are on my old blog at http://www.evotech.net/blog/2010/02/css3-properties-values-browser-support/ this is a huge file, so it may take a bit if you're on low bandwidth I go into further detail on a few of the CSS3 modules: Border Properties http://www.standardista.com/css3/css3-border-properties Background Properties: http://www.standardista.com/css3/css3-background-properties Font-face http://www.standardista.com/css3/font-face-browser-support Columns (just browser grid, no explanation yet) http://www.standardista.com/css3/css3-columns-browser-support Note taht for all of these posts, except for columns, the grid of support is at the top, and quirks and usage are explained at the bottom. I also did a presentation on CSS3 properties that are supported well enough to be used, since there are IE workarounds for them. http://www.standardista.com/css3-implementable-features Note that sites like Twitter.com are using CSS3, and it degrades nicely to IE. As long as it looks decent in IE, it doesn't need to look identical in all browsers. standardista, for example, is all CSS3 and HTML5. I works fine in IE7 and IE8, but has added appearance features in CSS3 supporting browsers. I think that is the way to go. No need to hold back to cater to non-supporting browsers, but you defnitely want your sites to work everywhere. -Estelle http://www.standardista.com ______________________________________________________________________ css-discuss [cs...@lists.css-discuss.org] http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d List wiki/FAQ -- http://css-discuss.incutio.com/ List policies -- http://css-discuss.org/policies.html Supported by evolt.org -- http://www.evolt.org/help_support_evolt/