The !important qualifier Hack for IE.
Note. After second thought, it's more likely to be a bug rather than a hack, but I still keep this post alive in order to let more guys know about the tissue. In some general cases, the !important qualifier works well in IE . For example, there is a P element. <p class="foo">This is a paragraph.</p> And have the following style applied on it, the !important qualifier works just well. p.foo { color: red !important; } p.foo { color: navy; } This will result in a red colour of text due to a higher cascading order. However, it is found that if we combine the above styles into one... p.foo { color: red !important; color: navy; } IE/Win will simply ignore the !important rule and apply a color of navy on the paragraph. So here comes a hack - we can use this trick to hide some styles. The only disadvantage I can see is the disturbed cascading order. This may cause problems in style sheet which is full of overridding. Currently tested on IE6/Win. A sam...