Ah, yes. I came across a particularly nasty side effect with clipping
of content with the alpha filter (I'd assume several filters do the
same, but alpha is what I've tested).

I'll be sure to make a simple test case demonstrating the problem
tomorrow (late in Norway now), which affects both IE 6 and 7.

--
Frode

On Jan 16, 8:46 pm, John Resig <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hmm, an interesting point. Do you have any test cases where the
> negative effect of an alpha filter is readily available? (It would
> help up to diagnose any problems if we were to implement this.)
>
> If you can think of one then feel free to file a 
> ticket!http://dev.jquery.com/newticket
>
> --John
>
> On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 12:45 PM, prefect <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > jQuery supports automatically using Explorer's Alpha filter for
> > setting an elements opacity, ie. when doing css('opacity', '0.5').
>
> > Explorer's filters have varying degrees of side effects, and to
> > minimize these I suggest automatically disabling the Alpha filter as
> > well when the opacity is set to 1.0, which equals no opacity anyway.
>
> > One can do this manually with css('filter', "alpha(enabled='false')"),
> > but I think jQuery just as well could do this automatically since it
> > already implisitly activates the filter.
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