Small H2
WebKit has big time restrictions on what you can change on a search input. I would guess the idea is consistency. In Safari particularly, search fields look just like the search box in the upper right of the browser. The following CSS will be ignored in WebKit “no matter what”, as in, you can’t even fight against it with !important rules ... mehr lesen
Medium H3
WebKit has big time restrictions on what you can change on a search input. I would guess the idea is consistency. In Safari particularly, search fields look just like the search box in the upper right of the browser. The following CSS will be ignored in WebKit “no matter what”, as in, you can’t even fight against it with !important rules.
Big H2
WebKit has big time restrictions on what you can change on a search input. I would guess the idea is consistency. In Safari particularly, search fields look just like the search box in the upper right of the browser. The following CSS will be ignored in WebKit “no matter what”, as in, you can’t even fight against it with !important rules.