- From: Noam Rosenthal via GitHub <sysbot+gh@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 27 Jan 2025 15:33:59 +0000
- To: public-css-archive@w3.org
> I'm still not sure how that works - the four corners can all have completely different angles, and lines extended from them aren't guaranteed to meet in a single point (in fact, they usually won't). Do you, like, find their first intersection points, then connect _those_ points with a line, to divvy up the interior into four zones (some of which might be trapezoidal), and then fill the border shape accordingly? That's what seems the most simple and logical to me to do with varying `border-color` and `border-width`. It's a lot simpler than trying to follow the perpendiculars, and would produce a much more coherent result when you have different color+width pairs. Perhaps we should start with that and check if we can allow more complex control later on? -- GitHub Notification of comment by noamr Please view or discuss this issue at https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/6997#issuecomment-2616085313 using your GitHub account -- Sent via github-notify-ml as configured in https://github.com/w3c/github-notify-ml-config
Received on Monday, 27 January 2025 15:34:00 UTC