Yes, this might be the same bug. The incident triage team independently confirmed that this is a regression introduced in 8u102. Btw, the bug is now available on bugs.openjdk.java.net here:

https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8185709

-- Kevin


Fisher, Robert [ext] wrote:
Could be the same as this bug here which was a regression in 8u102:

https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8183100

A workaround is to call Node#impl_reapplyCSS on the parent *after* putting the 
child back in the scene. But this isn't public API and is removed in Java 9, so 
you can alternatively just add and remove a dummy style class i.e.

field.getStyleClass().add("blah")
field.getStyleClass().remove("blah")

which may still work in 9.
Cheers,
Rob

-----Original Message-----
From: openjfx-dev [mailto:openjfx-dev-boun...@openjdk.java.net] On Behalf Of 
a...@adamish.com
Sent: Dienstag, 1. August 2017 16:09
To: openjfx-dev@openjdk.java.net
Subject: CSS style class rendering bug

(https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45440102/javafx-css-class-not-removed-when-node-disconnected)

I appeared to have discovered a case in JavaFX (8u144, running on Windows 7) where a TextField is rendered using the wrong style class.
This only appears to happen in the following situation

 * style class removed whilst Node not attached to Scene AND
 * parent `GridPane` has a style-class assigned, even if that class doesn't 
have content.

I've separated the issue from a larger application into the following contrived 
example:

    public class RenderBug extends Application {
private static final String ERROR = "error"; public static void main(String[] args) {
            launch(args);
        }
@Override
        public void start(Stage primaryStage) throws Exception {
            TextField field = new TextField();
            GridPane grid = new GridPane();
            grid.getStyleClass().add("some-random-class");
            grid.add(field, 0, 0);
StackPane stack = new StackPane(grid); Scene scene = new Scene(stack);
            scene.getStylesheets().add("/foo.css");
            primaryStage.setWidth(300);
            primaryStage.setHeight(300);
            primaryStage.setScene(scene);
            primaryStage.show();
Timeline line = new Timeline(); line.getKeyFrames().add(new
KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(4), event -> {
                field.getStyleClass().add(ERROR);
            }));
            line.getKeyFrames().add(new
KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(5), event -> {
                stack.getChildren().remove(grid);
            }));
            line.getKeyFrames().add(new
KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(6), event -> {
                field.getStyleClass().remove(ERROR);
            }));
            line.getKeyFrames().add(new
KeyFrame(Duration.seconds(7), event -> {
                stack.getChildren().add(grid);
System.out.println(field.getStyleClass());
            }));
line.play();
        }
}

foo.css

    .text-field.error {
        -fx-background-color: red;
    }
.some-random-class {
        /** no content required */
    }

Screenshot. At this point TextField is red, even though the class "error" has 
been removed. Even interacting with the field, resizing window etc. does not fix the 
issue.

[![TextField shown with red][1]][1]

Is this a genuine bug? or am I doing something wrong? I can't find any documentation to 
hint that style-classes cannot or shouldn't be updated "offline"

  [1]: https://i.stack.imgur.com/ZPEYi.png


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