- From: Alan Gresley <alan@css-class.com>
- Date: Fri, 10 Sep 2010 22:01:40 +1000
- To: Philippe Wittenbergh <ph.wittenbergh@l-c-n.com>
- CC: www-style list <www-style@w3.org>
Philippe Wittenbergh wrote: > On Sep 10, 2010, at 7:05 PM, Alan Gresley wrote: > >> What do you mean by the gradient's intermediate points are not in fact opaque? > A gradient from a fully opaque color to a fully transparent color > like this: > http://dev.l-c-n.com/_temp/gradient_tr.html > or worse :-) > http://dev.l-c-n.com/_temp/gradient_tr2.html > > Philippe > --- > Philippe Wittenbergh > http://l-c-n.com/ I see what BZ means. Almost the entire length of the gradient is semi-opaque. It seems to become more transparent at an even rate. I myself would like what is currently happening for some cases. Here is an example. <http://css-class.com/test/css/colors/gradient-test1.htm> It would look different if the gradients were premultiplied. -- Alan http://css-class.com/ Armies Cannot Stop An Idea Whose Time Has Come. - Victor Hugo
Received on Friday, 10 September 2010 12:02:12 UTC