This removes the `grid` prefix from the gap-related properties of grid since they are now part of the box alignment specification. Former grid-gap* properties were aliased to the unprefixed properties to maintain compatibility.
The previously multi-column layout only `column-gap` property has been modified to apply to the Grid layout (and Flexbox in a following commit), moving the `mColumnGap` member variable from `nsStyleColumn` to `nsStylePosition`.
Notes:
* Bug 1398537 - support for percent values in column-gap for multi-column layout landed as part of Issue #1230. However, it was incomplete because it did not update `nsRuleNode` to allow transformation of percentage values for `column-gap`. This was consequently fixed as part of this commit.
* Bug 1456166 - this might not apply because we don't have that devtools test in UXP
* `nsRuleNode`, `nsCSSParser`, `Declaration`, and other related classes were merged into Stylo. These should be taken into consideration when porting patches from Mozilla.
Partially based on https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1398482
Currently -moz-tab-size only accepts <number> values, and both Chrome and Firefox currently support <length> values and have for some time now. So with this you would be able to support sizes in px or em, for instance. This was implemented in Firefox 53 and was trivial to backport.
This CSS property allows input carets (that blinking input cursor you see in text fields), to be given a custom color. This was implemented in Firefox 53, and it was such a minor feature that no one ever missed it, but I don't see any harm in implementing this.
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1063162
Since these are just interpreted comments, there's 0 impact on actual code.
This removes all lines that match /* vim: set(.*)tw=80: */ with S&R -- there are
a few others scattered around which will be removed manually in a second part.
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1547792
Aspect Ratio handling simplified by using floating point integers:
- Multiplication of value (or inverse value) to a known side for Scaling
- No unequal equal values such as "4/3" vs "8/6" vs "20/15"
- Truly "Empty" aspect ratios, even if one dimension is not 0