On the standards track: Yes
Is Experimental: No
Is Deprecated: No
In Chrome version 26 on 2013-03-26
In Chrome Android version 26 on 2013-04-03
In Edge version 12 on 2015-07-29
In Firefox version 16 on 2012-10-09 Note: Before Firefox 36, gradients weren't applied on the pre-multiplied color space, leading to shades of grey unexpectedly appearing when used with transparency. Since Firefox 42, the prefixed version of gradients can be disabled by setting layout.css.prefixes.gradients to false. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Firefox for Android version 16 on 2012-10-09 Note: Before Firefox for Android 36, gradients weren't applied on the pre-multiplied color space, leading to shades of grey unexpectedly appearing when used with transparency. Since Firefox for Android 42, the prefixed version of gradients can be disabled by setting layout.css.prefixes.gradients to false. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Internet Explorer version 10 on 2012-10-26 Note: Internet Explorer 5.5 through 9.0 supported gradients via a proprietary filter: -ms-filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Gradient().
In Quest Browser version 5.0 on undefined
In Opera version 12.1 on 2012-11-20 Note: Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Opera Android version 12.1 on 2012-10-09 Note: Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Safari version 7 on 2013-10-22 Note: Safari 4 was supporting an experimental -webkit-gradient(linear,…) function. It is more limited than the later standard version: you cannot specify both a position and an angle like in repeating-linear-gradient(). This old outdated syntax is still supported for compatibility purposes. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Safari on iOS version 7 on 2013-09-18 Note: Safari on iOS 3.2 was supporting an experimental -webkit-gradient(linear,…) function. It is more limited than the later standard version: you cannot specify both a position and an angle like in repeating-linear-gradient(). This old outdated syntax is still supported for compatibility purposes. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.
In Samsung Internet version 1.5 on 2013-09-25
In WebView Android version 4.4 on 2013-12-09
In WebView on iOS version 7 on 2013-09-18 Note: WebView on iOS 3.2 was supporting an experimental -webkit-gradient(linear,…) function. It is more limited than the later standard version: you cannot specify both a position and an angle like in repeating-linear-gradient(). This old outdated syntax is still supported for compatibility purposes. Considers <angle> to start to the right, instead of the top. I.e. it considered an angle of 0deg as a direction indicator pointing to the right.