On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

Break free from CSS prefix hell!

Only 2KB gzipped Fork me on GitHub

-prefix-free lets you use only unprefixed CSS properties everywhere. It works behind the scenes, adding the current browser’s prefix to any CSS code, only when it’s needed.

“[-prefix-free is] fantastic, top-notch work! Thank you for creating and sharing it.”

Eric Meyer

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

Check this page’s stylesheet ;-)

You can also visit the Test Drive page, type in any code you want and check out how it would get prefixed for the current browser.

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

Just include prefixfree.js anywhere in your page. It is recommended to put it right after the stylesheets, to minimize FOUC

That’s it, you’re done!

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

The target browser support is IE9+, Opera 10+, Firefox 3.5+, Safari 4+ and Chrome on desktop and Mobile Safari, Android browser, Chrome and Opera Mobile on mobile.

If it doesn’t work in any of those, it’s a bug so please report it. Just before you do, please make sure that it’s not because the browser doesn’t support a CSS3 feature at all, even with a prefix.

In older browsers like IE8, nothing will break, just properties won’t get prefixed. Which wouldn’t be useful anyway as IE8 doesn’t support much CSS3 ;)

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

Test the prefixing that -prefix-free would do for this browser, by writing some CSS below:

Type the following command exactly:

On Windows 10: How To Run Telnet Towel.blinkenlights.nl

Type the following command exactly:

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