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In 1994,
Netscape defined 216 colors that have priority
in browsers based on the 256 colors displayed
by an 8-bit system. 40 colors display
differently between PCs and MACs and are
therefore eliminated.
These 216 fixed colors, known as web safe
colors are universally recognized by all
browsers and operating systems. This means
that web pages which use only these colors
have a better chance of looking the same on
any browser.
Less than 5% of computer systems are currently
using 8-bit systems and are thus confined to
256 colors. However, you should still use web
safe colors as a starting point, especially
for logos, flat color illustrations,
backgrounds, and large areas of the same color
in any image.
Colors are made up of 3 pairs of hexadecimal
digits. Each pair represents a value from 3
root colors: red, green, and blue usually
represented as RGB.
Hexadecimal is based on 16 digits not 10. So,
A would be equivalent to 11, B to 12, and so
on. For example, 000000 is black, FFFFFF is
white and FF0000 is red. The first pair of
numbers shows the amount of red, the second
set shows how much green and the last set
shows how much blue is used to obtain that
particular color. 00 represents no amount of
that color (0%) while FF is the most amount of
any color you can use (100%).
Here's the percentage breakdown:
0%=00, 20%=33, 40%=66, 60%=99, 80%=CC,
100%=FF.
Web safe colors, which are made up of 3 pairs
of identical hexadecimal digits, consist of
every combination of 00, 33, 66, 99, CC, and
FF for each root color (6 x 6 x 6 = 216).
Todays computers are no longer limited to the
256 colors displayed by 8-bit video cards.
16-bit cards display 4096 colors (referred to
as web smart colors) while, 32-bit cards will
display millions of different colors (referred
to as unsafe colors). The total number of
possible colors is over 16 million as each
root color can be one of 256 values (256 x 256
x 256 = 16,777,216). Your browser can display
any of these colors as long as your video card
will support it.
There are many color wheels and charts
available on the internet to help you choose
web safe, web smart, or unsafe colors. Here
are a few:
A 216 web safe color chart can be found at:
http://www.permadi.com/tutorial/websafecolor/
And also at:
http://www.techbomb.com/websafe/
4096 Color Wheel will provide the hexadecimal
values for web safe, web smart, and unsafe
colors along with different saturations of
hues and is available at:
http;//www.ficml.org/jemimap/style/color/wheel.html
4096 Color Picker & Mixer demonstrates how
different colored text appears against
assorted colored backgrounds using the web
smart palette. It's available at:
http://www.webcolors.freeserve.co.uk/pick4096.htm
DHTML Color Wheel provides the hexadecimal
codes for all 16,777,216 colors. It's
available at:
http://www.geocities.com/~prof_al/examples/colorwheel.html
Another version of the same color wheel
displays your chosen color on the entire page.
Find it at:
http://www.jeffchester.com/colorwheel.html
Although modern browsers will display over 16
million colors, colors other than web safe
colors may not display the same on different
browsers. If you choose to use colors on your
web pages from the web smart or unsafe color
palettes, always view your pages on different
browsers. This is to make sure that the colors
that look great on your browser display the
same or close to the same color on other
browsers.
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Ian Del Carmen is an online business
professional running his main site at
http://www.ianDelCarmen.com. His other
sites include
http://TheOnlineBusinessProfessional.com,
http://MobileEbooks.net,
http://InfoProductLaboratory.com, and many
more...
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