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â This "color wheel" arrangement is a compact and visual way to represent a whole range of colors. I was reminded of the named/web colors by a recent Hacker News comment thread, and thought again of arranging them into a color wheel. So here it is: a color wheel, with only "web colors" on it. Each color is placed on the wheel, then grown to a polygon to fill the wheel with a Voronoi diagram. Hover
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Why do certain random strings produce colors when entered as background colors in HTML? For example, bgcolor="chucknorris" produces a red background: <body bgcolor="chucknorris"> test </body> Conversely, bgcolor="chucknorr" produces a yellow background: <body bgcolor="chucknorr"> test </body> This holds true across various browsers and platforms. Whatâs going on here?
#HEXWORDS Why bother with a random green when you can choose to be a #BADA55! #5EE (SEE) #5EE5 (SEES) #D1D (DID) #5A1D (SAID) #0FF (OFF) #0FF5 (OFFS) #D0E5 (DOES) #DAD (DAD) #DAD5 (DADS) #BAD (BAD) #BAD5 (BADS) #DEAD (DEAD) #BAB1E5 (BABIES) #D1E (DIE) #1DEA (IDEA) #FACE (FACE) #A55 (ASS) #CA5E (CASE) #51DE (SIDE) #B055E5 (BOSSES) #BED (BED) #B055 (BOSS) #F00D (FOOD) #0FF1CE (OFFICE) #C0FFEE (COFFE
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Why we need to revisit the origin of blue hyperlink While musing over my recently published article, Why are hyperlinks blue, I was left feeling a bit blue myself. Yes, it could have been the fact that I was evacuated and Hurricane Ida was destroying my home, Iâll admit. Besides that, I was also bothered by the fact that even though I was able to determine that Mosaic was indeed the first browser
So here's a CSS linear gradient, going from pure yellow to pure blue: Notice that it gets kinda washed out and muddy in the middle there? This is what Erik Kennedy has coined the âgray dead zoneâ. Unless you're really careful when selecting colors for your gradients, you'll often wind up with a desaturated midsection in your CSS gradients. As it turns out, though, we can absolutely avoid the gray
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Summary Our current issue icon colors are a source of constant user feedback, citing confusion with errors, confusion between why Open is green and Closed is red, accessibility concerns and the general scariness of seeing red across the issues index page when a bunch of closed issues is usually a good thing. Furthermore, customers also need a way to quickly differentiate issues that are closed bec
The Piet language interpreter begins executing a program in the colour block which includes the upper left codel of the program. The interpreter maintains a Direction Pointer (DP), initially pointing to the right. The DP may point either right, left, down or up. The interpreter also maintains a Codel Chooser (CC), initially pointing left. The CC may point either left or right. The directions of th
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