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As seen in How to include code inside a quotation?

A very quick investigation (literally, right-click, Inspect Element :D) found the cause. For some reason, the minifier has interpreted tabs to be part of the CSS property value, resulting in display:block\9 (\9 being tab in CSS escape code) which, obviously breaks things completely.

Bad minifier!

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  • 1
    I also found a max-height:600px\9; which gets declared as invalid by Firefox.
    – Floern
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 13:41
  • 1
    Would you mind posting this as an answer on my bug report: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/321990/…? Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 13:52
  • Huh, I don't see that with the latest Firefox. And there is no tab character in the answer I think.
    – Tunaki
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 14:21
  • 14
    For reference this is usually an IE CSS hack (CSS \9 in width property), but I have no idea what the purpose would be here. Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 15:24
  • @AlexanderO'Mara "This simply means that the one specific line of CSS ending with a \9; in place of the ; is only valid in IE 7, 8, & 9." if it was intentional, they didn't expect other browsers to try and parse the rule.
    – Braiam
    Commented Apr 30, 2016 at 13:26
  • @Braiam Yes, I was just questioning what the significance of this particular instance of the CSS property hack is, but I don't feel like firing up my IE VM's to test it out in. Commented May 1, 2016 at 4:28
  • 1
    I'm not so sure this is the bug. It seems more like a workaround not being applied, and the real bug is that a colour is applied to code elements inside blockquote, but the same colour is not applied not to pre elements in side blockquote.
    – user743382
    Commented May 1, 2016 at 14:20
  • Fixed: meta.stackoverflow.com/a/331612/4574
    – Konamiman
    Commented Aug 4, 2016 at 8:26

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