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nzakas edited this page May 14, 2012 · 2 revisions

The star hack is a famous (or perhaps infamous) technique for applying CSS properties only to Internet Explorer prior to version 8. By placing an asterisk immediately before the property name, older versions of Internet Explorer treated as if the asterisk isn't there while other browsers simply ignore it. For example:

.mybox {
    border: 1px solid black;
    padding: 5px;
    width: 100px;
    *width: 200px;
}

In this example, the *width property is treated as if it were width by Internet Explorer 7 and earlier, so it uses the value of 200px; other browsers skip that property and use the value of 100px.

Star hack relies on an old CSS parser bug in Internet Explorer, and as such, some prefer not to use it.

Rule Details

Rule ID: star-property-hack

This rule is aimed at eliminating the use of the star hack in CSS. As such, the rule warns when it finds a property preceded with an asterisk.

The following patterns are considered warnings:

.mybox {
    border: 1px solid black;
    *width: 100px;
}

Further Reading

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