...when the style is `none` or `hidden`. `outline-width` is not affected
by `outline-style: none` at all.
In our codebase, that means doing the border-width conversion when
assigning to ComputedValues.
Corresponds to:
2a3d1e4d1009f11f2ef9
Some subtests changed in response to this CSSWG resolution:
https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/11494#issuecomment-2675800489
Basically, `border-style: none` now affects the used value of
`border-width`, not the computed value. (And the same for `outline`
properties.)
This affects way more tests than I expected because
interpolation-testcommon.js now adds tests for composition.
We now also store `outline-width` in ComputedValues as a `CSSPixels`
since we know it's an absolute length at `apply_style` time - this saves
us some work in converting to CSSPixels during layout.
Gains us 46 new passes since we now interpolate keywords (thick, thin,
etc) correctly.
Also loses us 4 WPT tests as we longer clamp negative values produced by
interpolation from the point of view of getComputedStyle (although the
'used' value is still clamped).
Shorthand subproperties that match their initial values are now
excluded from serialization, by default.
Properties where this behavior is not desired, like `gap`, are
special-cased.
The `cursor` property accepts a list of possible cursors, which behave
as a fallback: We use whichever cursor is the first available one. This
is a little complicated because initially, any remote images have not
loaded, so we need to use the fallback standard cursor, and then switch
to another when it loads.
So, ComputedValues stores a Vector of cursors, and then in EventHandler
we scan down that list until we find a cursor that's ready for use.
The spec defines cursors as being `<url>`, but allows for `<image>`
instead. That includes functions like `linear-gradient()`.
This commit implements image cursors in the Qt UI, but not AppKit.