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<meta charset="utf-8">
<link rel="author" title="Tyler Wilcock" href="mailto:[email protected]">
<link rel="help" href="https://drafts.csswg.org/css-backgrounds/#border-image-width">
<!-- Editorial of the spec.
> Since by default a border image is only drawn in the border area, by default a border-style of none will make
> it disappear. However, the border-image-outset and border-image-width values can alter the “border” area into
> which the border image is drawn, extending it into the padding area (in the case of border-image-widths greater
> than the border-width) or extending it outside the border edge (in the case of border-image-outset greater than zero).
-->
<link rel="help" href="https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/655#issuecomment-331059128">
<link rel="match" href="border-image-width-should-extend-to-padding-ref.html">
<title>
`border-image-width` should extend into padding given an empty border area via `border-style: none`
</title>
<style>
div {
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
margin: 20px;
background-color: silver;
border-image-source: linear-gradient(blue, orange);
border-image-slice: 32;
border-image-repeat: repeat;
border-image-width: 32px;
border-style: none;
}
</style>
Test passes if a 200x200px (content + padding + border) box with a 32px border-image is rendered.
<div></div>