This is quite a breaking change, but I think it is beneficial due to the large amount of usage of this class.
I originally intended just to remove the allocations of the two delegates handling the `Changed` flow internally, but as nothing was really using the bindables for anything more than a general "point has changed" case, this felt like a better direction.
`DifficultyCacheLookup`s were storing raw `Mod` instances into their
`OrderedMods` field. This could cause the cache lookups to wrongly
succeed in cases of mods with settings. The particular case that
triggered this fix was Difficulty Adjust.
Because the difficulty cache is backed by a dictionary, there are two
stages to the lookup; first `GetHashCode()` is used to find the
appropriate hash bucket to look in, and then items from that hash bucket
are compared against the key being searched for via the implementation
of `Equals()`.
As it turns out, the first hashing step ended up being the saving grace
in most cases, as the hash computation included the values of the mod
settings. But the Difficulty Adjust failure case was triggered by the
quirk that `GetHashCode(0) == GetHashCode(null) == 0`.
In such a case, the `Equals()` fallback was used. But as it turns out,
because the `Mod` instance stored to lookups was not cloned and
therefore potentially externally mutable, it could be polluted after
being stored to the dictionary, and therefore breaking the equality
check. Even though all of the setting values were compared, the hash
bucket didn't match the actual contents of the lookup anymore (because
they were mutated externally, e.g. by the user changing the mod setting
values in the mod settings overlay).
To resolve, clone out the mod structure before creating all difficulty
lookups.
`IHasComboColours` was already mutable (via a strange
`AddComboColours()` method) and exposing a straight list is easier to
work with. `IHasCustomColours` is also similarly externally mutable (in
a way which is not easily removable).
Looks silly when using `12f`, I've added a todo comment so that this specific case does not get forgotten when CSS-compatible font sizing gets supported.
The todo comment may not be 100% required but very unsure about silently changing it and forgetting about it.