I hope you're staying warm. We had -15°F this morning with -25°F forecast for Saturday night. Definitely colder than the last few years for us. The coldest I remember was -35° during a cold spell that lasted more than a week back in the late 90's. Fun times.
I just noticed this today as I was weeding out support for old IE gradient images from my stylesheets:
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#navigation div.drop{position:relative;border:0;border-top-color:transparent;border-radius:0;box-shadow:none}
But ideally the message should indicate that since a value of zero was used, any subsequent properties will be ignored and should be removed. I would think this would apply to lots of other circumstances, just not sure of how much code changes would be involved.[604] The "border" shorthand property and the "border-top-color" property have both been used. The "border" shorthand property already defines the following properties: "border-style", "border-top-color", and "border-width". Therefore, the "border-top-color" property has been defined twice. Consider using only the "border" shorthand property.
My reasoning is I see messages all the time that indicate something was defined more than once and ignore them because you haven't coded for them yet.
Support for legacy browsers:
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.navpay #navpay a{background:#1e2d54;background:linear-gradient(to bottom,#3f4e73 0,#000f37 35%,#000f37 100%)}
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.search_button:hover,.search_button:focus{border:1px solid #89a4d2;border-width:0 1px}