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Hexadecimal Colour

Hexadecimal Colour

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Martyn

Martyn

Rafaloution
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Hexadecimal Colour

How can I find out the hexadecimal colour of an image if I dont know it?

Someone else desigined my header on www.coolasfire.info and I need to know the colour of the grey in the header! Can anyone help?

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spot

spot

{mac++}
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the ONLY reason why im doing this is because you used the Canadian spelling of colour Smile

AAAAAA

ps. post these questions in the client side forum please

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Andy_K

Andy_K

designerpad.org
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Quote:

Originally posted by spot
you used the Canadian spelling of colour Smile

That would be the 'English' spelling of colour. Canadian is not a language...

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michael

michael

hai2u
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Quote:

Originally posted by Scryypy
That would be the 'English' spelling of colour. Canadian is not a language...

We leave out the 'u' in color here in the states and it is refered to as U.S. English so no surprise Canada would have some variations as well and adopt some of the same stuff as the US has and some of the same as the UK has.

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I use photoshop and double click on a color and check.

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Andy_K

Andy_K

designerpad.org
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Quote:

Originally posted by PolishKid
U.S. English

U.S. English is also not a language. It's just retarded.

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LadyFirelyght

LadyFirelyght

oh em gee!
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Quote:

Originally posted by Scryypy
It's just retarded.

Incorrect my dear Liverpoolian friend. Different != retarded.

What the general populace of the United States speak is a dialect of English. Within the US there are several sub-dialects. Same with Canada, Australia, England, and other English-speaking countries. Same language, different dialects.

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Andy_K

Andy_K

designerpad.org
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Quote:

Originally posted by Lady Firelyght
Same language, different dialects.

di·a·lect
n.

1.
1. A regional or social variety of a language distinguished by pronunciation, grammar, or vocabulary, especially a variety of speech differing from the standard literary language or speech pattern of the culture in which it exists: Cockney is a dialect of English.
2. A variety of language that with other varieties constitutes a single language of which no single variety is standard: the dialects of Ancient Greek.
2. The language peculiar to the members of a group, especially in an occupation; jargon: the dialect of science.
3. The manner or style of expressing oneself in language or the arts.
4. A language considered as part of a larger family of languages or a linguistic branch. Not in scientific use: Spanish and French are Romance dialects.

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Leaving out letters because you are lazy and changing and s to a z is not a dialect. It is retarded.

Also, it's 'Liverpudlian'

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Dennis

Dennis

Dennis
Status: Offline!

There is a really good program out there called color cop that will do just that. Here is the link:
http://www.datastic.com/tools/colorcop/

Incarnate

Incarnate

Knightmaire
Status: Offline!

I might as well join this linguistic slugfest.

Before Scryypy goes nuts being nationalistic, spelling differences do NOT count as a different dialect. But, I don't think anyone is being lazy leaving out letters, it's just the way the language evolved due to societal differences and off-the-record reasons.

It's the same reason Americans say apartment instead of flat. Are English folks being lazy or retarded for using a 4-letter word instead of a nine-letter word? I don't think so. Again, it's just how language evolved.

What DOES count as a different dialect, though, are the 'accents' that we call New Yorkers, Southerners, etc. The language and spelling are all the same, but the pronunciation is different. Shanghainese, Mandarin, Cantonese, and Taiwanese (I think) are all different dialects; they share the same written language but the pronunciation is different.

There.

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Martyn

Martyn

Rafaloution
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Sccrypy im from Liverpool as well!

freestyle_web: that program is fantastic thanks!

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Last edited by Martyn, November 21st, 2004 08:46 PM (Edited 1 times)

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