I have something like this
<h1>
<a href="/" title="Home">Home</a>
</h1>
Very simple. IE, FF render it smoothly, underline works fine. Safari does this weird thing I've never seen before, it underlines "Home" only where the font serifs & curves DONT touch t开发者_StackOverflow中文版he underline, i.e. the letter "H" would get underline between the two "pillars" (sounds weird i know), and where those two touch the underline, the latter becomes much lighter in color (#eee vs #000).
UPDATE: Apparently Safari's not rendering the link well when there's
text-shadow: 0px 2px 1px #fff;
Is there a particular reason for this?
The reason is because the text-shadow is rendered on the frontmost layer. If I were you I'd add a border-bottom to the h1 a element with no text underline.
h1 a {
text-decoration: none;
border-bottom: 1px solid blue;
}
Of course, replace blue with whatever colour your links are.
Edit: Realized that the shadow could be fixed with a span
tag.
I think having a bit of space between the underline and the baseline when using the drop shadow looks better, but if you must have a text-decoration: underline
you would have to add a span element to your markup:
<a href="/" title="Home"><span>Home</span></a>
CSS:
h1 a span {
position: relative;
top: 0px;
z-index: -100;
}
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