The most popular are Hex color codes; three byte hexadecimal numbers (meaning they consist of six digits), with each byte, or pair of characters in the Hex code, representing the intensity of red, green and blue in the color respectively.
Hex code byte values range from 00, which is the lowest intensity of a color, to FF which represents the highest intensity. The color white, for example, is made by mixing each of the three primary colors at their full intensity, resulting in the Hex color code of #FFFFFF.
I was doing some testing on iPhones and iPads, and the phone number automatically shows up as a link (so the user can click on it and the phone will call). I like that, but the number shows up in black text (which is hard to see).
For item #2, it looks like the a tag you gave me worked. The link is blue now. Is there a way to also change the hover color? I tried the css code but the link on the webpage is still the same color blue no matter what color I try to change it to.
I had this bug in Windows but not in MacOS. I changed the Temporal-color-code macro as suggested and it solved the issue. Any clue why the original code worked in Mac but not in Windows? Something to do with Java?
So can't seem to get this to work using a formula, just can't get it to work. What I need some help with is how to make G2 in the above to turn a color based off the date input into F2 and the number of days from Today.
- Say today is NOV 1, Suspend Date (F2) is Dec 15, that's 45 days so I want to show it as yellow for upcoming task. Anything over 60 days would be blue. If the task isn't indicated as completed in L 2 then G2 goes red because the math becomes a negative number.
From the windows click on new rule --> Use a formula to determine which cells to format --> write the first formula in the format values where this formula is true box, --> click on Format button and pick up the blue color, --> OK
The article describes how the color system works - as far as I can tell, as you found out, the number you are looking for: -687800321 when written in HEX is: &HD700FFFF (which is NOT RGB); instead this notation represents theme color "number 7" with lightness-darkness of FFFF.
I think this essentially means you will need to create / find some sort of translation table to store in your conversion macro (or figure out what all the theme colors are and do something sneaky, see below).
And then you can use this function (see below) from the original article to convert accent2 and tint66 into the obscure number that are otherwise unable to determine.
After long investigation I've almost* find a solution. Here is my second topic in other forum. -PL/2ea570b5-ce3a-4f37-a37c-9b2100941d39/how-to-find-shading-in-word-document-using-color-number-reciving-from-wordopenxml
I have an excel sheet with data of planned and pending projects. In column "I" it states number of weeks required for completion of the project. Each row has separate projects listed. Column "J" to "BH" are blank and each cell in that column for that row indicates a week. So if the value in Column "I" Row "2" is 4, I want excel to color the cells inline with that project row. i.e. color columns J to M in row 2.
Color by Number is an interactive coloring activity for preschoolers. This cool math game is designed to teach kids basic number recognition as they have fun with colors. Kids will improve their number recognition skill as they identify and match each number with its corresponding color using a number-color key to color the picture according to given directions. This game will reinforce the child's understanding of numbers as well as develop your kid's artistic abilities.
My eyes say the first one is close to, or maybe an exact match to "Prusa Orange", but I've learned the hard way that trusting your eyes when it comes to things like color matching is a crapshoot... Sometimes once you get what you thought you ordered, the color is totally wrong. So, does anyone know if either of those are close, or even an exact match, to the actual color number for "Prusa Orange"?
I also think filament colors appear slightly different based on the surface texture. At least to my eyes, Prusamemt Orange looks different when printed on the smooth sheet compared to the textured sheet.
Bob, thanks for that pic comparing what I can get from my supplier and what Prusa themselves is selling (and presumably what they use as well). I'm used to paying $8.99/kg, so it's going to hurt a little, but I would rather have the right color than just "close enough", so I'll grin and bear the price diff.
Colors for plastics are defined according to the RAL system. Prusa Orange corresponds exactly to RAL2005. Look for a filament that corresponds to RAL2005, if the manufacturer can be trusted the color should match. Unfortunately, Prusa also deviates from its standard depending on the batch.
I've found "close" is usually good enough. As others have noted, the RGB color codes are really meant for illuminated screen displays, and you'd want to use codes suited for solids to get an exact match. That said, without more info, you're probably going to just convert from RGB to RAL (or similar) so lose any precision there. I'm not a graphics artist, but I know they spend a lot of time calibrating between screen (additive) and print (subtractive) colors.
If it's the former you want, an easy solution involves loading the hyperref package, setting its option colorlinks to true, and specifying the additional option citecolor=blue. As a separate (and probably quite important) benefit, the citation callouts will be made into hyperlinks to the corresponding entries.
Currently my default color is red, and this doesn't work because I have a number of conditional formatting rules in the background using "Green" "Orange" & "Red" as a traffic light system to monitor progress on tasks.
@Mark_Gibbons_1 Color coding is changed by using conditional formatting. The conditional formatting rules are applied from top to bottom. So if you wanted to add grey, you would need to add a rule at the bottom of your list that applies when the previous do not. You would set the Task Bar color to Grey for the entire row. You should list the most urgent rules first. On mine it is red for expired. Then continue to add rules in the order of importance. Finally add a rule for when status or primary is not blank, set to grey. This will apply to all rows where the previous rules didn't apply. I hope this makes sense. I am happy to try to provide more assistance if needed.
I've added a screen print below, this is my current view on card view, the default color is red on all of these tasks. I have set up conditional formatting in the background, red is one of the colors I actually used, but the problem I have is that the default color on scorecards is already red, which is not convenient, I would like to change the default color on here to Grey if possible so that if no criteria's are being met under conditional formatting these task show grey.
Hello Barry,
Go to C/C++ Occurrences in Preferences->General->Annotations and change Text as to something other than highlight (i.e. "Box", Dashed Box or etc.). You can also change the box color.
Not specific to coloring, but may be a workaround for it, Nick. You could simply click on the Reminder (clock) icon of the candidates in that notebook who are actively seeking, as you put it. (No need to add a date to the reminder at all; just click on the clock icon.) These will shuffle those candidates' notes to the top of your notebook when you click on that notebook. Now, you don't need to scroll through the list because you have prioritized those candidates to the top. When done, just click on the Reminder icon and clear the reminder to remove them from the "actively seeking" status. Nothing else about the note changes, but that reminder note status. Hope that helps!
message:color: Must be one of dark-blue, dark-brown, dark-green, dark-orange, dark-pink, dark-purple, dark-red, dark-teal, dark-warm-gray, light-blue, light-green, light-orange, light-pink, light-purple, light-red, light-teal, light-warm-gray, light-yellow, none, not: purple
Then, I tried to create a new tag with an invalid color, to see if the error message has changed since @FreshyJon tried it.
I get that list of available colors:
light-orange, dark-orange, dark-red, light-pink, dark-pink, light-green, dark-green, light-warm-gray, dark-brown, light-teal, dark-teal, dark-purple, light-purple, light-red, light-blue
PLUS
dark-blue, dark-warm-gray, light-yellow, none