Styles overridden by the `all` property appear as though in-affect (not strike-through)
Reported by
mightyia...@gmail.com,
Mar 12 2017
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Issue descriptionUserAgent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/57.0.2987.98 Safari/537.36 Steps to reproduce the problem: 1. Use the CSS property `all` to override a normal CSS property (here is a fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/mightyiam/to0drdsc/ ). 2. Inspect an element that is affected by this override. 3. See the styles tab and the computed tab. What is the expected behavior? The overridden value should be strike-through. What went wrong? The overridden value appears not strike-through, as if it is in affect. Did this work before? N/A Chrome version: 57.0.2987.98 Channel: stable OS Version: Flash Version: I have attached a screenshot for the styles tab and one for the computed tab. For reference, I have attached screenshots for the correct behavior. To obtain those, I have not used the `all` property to override, but the specific property.
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Mar 17 2017
Tested the issue on chrome #57.0.2978.98,Stable #57.0.2978.110 and Canary 59.0.3044.0 in Ubuntu 14.04 and was able to reproduce the issue. This is a Non-Regression issue since seeing this from M35 #35.0.1898.0, Making the status to Untriaged so that the issue would get addressed. Note : Able to reproduce the issue in MAC 10.12 and Windows 10.0. Thank you.
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Mar 17 2017
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Oct 31
Bulk closing low-priority issues with no activity. Please re-file and refer to the closed issue if it's essential to fix. |
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Comment 1 by ajha@chromium.org
, Mar 16 2017