As noted, this is not 100% to the spec, but effectively the same -
`no-preference` is only allowed to appear in features that evaluate it
as false in a boolean context. This is also the only identifier besides
`none` that evaluates to false. If other identifiers gain this property
in the future, we can make it more robust then.
Previously this queried the root layout-node's font, which was both
wrong and could crash if the layout wasn't ready yet. Now, it's just
wrong. But at least all the font-related wrongness is grouped together
in StyleComputer. :^)
As noted, the Parser can't handle the `<number>` syntax for this - it
gets parsed instead by the `<number>` branch. We can't actually resolve
the ambiguity without making the Parser aware of what type each
media-feature is, but I will get to that soon. :^)
This is the only dimension type besides `<length>` that is used in any
media queries in levels 4 or 5 right now. Others can be included
if/when they're needed.
"5em" means 5*font-size, but by forcing "em" to mean the presentation
size of the bitmap font actually used, we broke a bunch of layouts that
depended on a correct interpretation of "em".
This means that "em" units will no longer be relative to the exact
size of the bitmap font in use, but I think that's a compromise we'll
have to make, since accurate layouts are more important.
This yields a visual progression on both ACID2 and ACID3. :^)
As noted, this is not entirely right, since we are using the computed
font's metrics instead of the initial font's metrics, but we do not
have a good way to obtain the latter.
This means you can now do queries like:
```css
@media (400px <= width < 800px) { }
```
Chromium and Firefox which I tested with both don't support this yet, so
that's cool. :^)
Web::CSS::MediaQuery::MediaFeature::Type was getting a bit ridiculous!
Also, this moves the detection of "min-" and "max-" media-features into
the MediaFeature itself, since this is an implementation detail, not
part of the spec.
Previously, we were using StyleValues for this, which was a bit of a
hack and was brittle, breaking when I modified how custom properties
were parsed. This is better and also lets us limit the kinds of value
that can be used here, to match the spec.
Currently, `evaluate()` recalculates whether the MediaQuery matches or
not, and stores it in `m_matches`, which users can query using
`matches()`. This allows us to know when the match-state changes, which
is required to fire MediaQueryList's change event.