Basically moves `PopoverContainer` to cover both the columns and the customisation panel, so that if the customisation panel is clicked on, the popover container will notice that and hide popovers like the mod preset popover.
I've also removed inheritance from `SearchTextBox` because it contains
logic that might interfere with the internal implementation of dropdown
search bars (focus logic and stuff).
Closes https://github.com/ppy/osu/issues/28587.
As outlined in the issue thread, the tail volume wasn't saving because
it wasn't actually attached to a hitobject properly, and as such the
`LegacyBeatmapEncoder` logic, which is based on hitobjects, did not
pick them up on save.
To fix that, switch to using `NodeSamples` for objects that are
`IHasRepeats`. That has one added complication in that having it work
properly requires changes to the decode side too. That is because the
intent is to allow the user to change the sample settings for each node
(which are specified via `NodeSamples`), as well as "the rest of the
object", which generally means ticks or auxiliary samples like
`sliderslide` (which are specified by `Samples`).
However, up until now, `Samples` always queried the control point
which was _active at the end time of the slider_. This obviously can't
work anymore when converting `NodeSamples` to legacy control points,
because the last node's sample is _also_ at the end time of the slider.
To bypass that, add extra sample points after each node (just out of
reach of the 5ms leniency), which are supposed to control volume of
ticks and/or slides.
Upon testing, this *sort of* has the intended effect in stable, with
the exception of `sliderslide`, which seems to either respect or _not_
respect the relevant volume spec dependent on... not sure what, and not
sure I want to be debugging that. It might be frame alignment, or it
might be the phase of the moon.
I thought this was already being handled, but it turns out that changing
sort mode (and potentially other operations) could break the depth of
display of panels due to pooling and what not.
This ensures consistency and also employs @bdach's suggestion of
reversing the depth above and below the current selection for a better
visual effect.