Earlier today I posted a question on CSS animations that weren't working cross-browser. After a lot debugging I finally figured out that the problem lies in a single CSS property, will-change
, that in some browsers causes animations on the same element not to take place.
Even though I know that this causes the problem (when I remove will-change
everything is working smoothly), I would also like to know what the reason is. Is it simply a (known) browser bug, or is there a programmatical or logical reasoning behind this behaviour. Maybe I'm implementing the properties wrongly?
All questions I'd like to see answered, but no one will look at the question any longer, because I have the answer (animation doesn't work because will-change is in the same property list), but I also want to know why.
What is the best way to deal with this issue? I see a couple of options:
- Add a bounty to draw attention. Considering it's my own question and bounty, and I answered it myself, I am free to assign the bounty to whomever I feel explains the behaviour best. However, this would require other users to post answers that aren't answers to the original question (why isn't this working), but an answer to the underlying reason. Semantically, that doesn't seem correct.
- Add a new question, while referring to the old one. This seems redundant. Users will have to take a look at the original question any way.
- Ask for comments. Comments seem like a better place for an exposition of the underlying issue, but firstly comments aren't allowed to be quite long and secondly: there's no way to motivate and attract users to help out on an already answered and accepted answer.