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To use a colour in a template or table you can use the hex triplet (e.g. bronze is #CD7F32) or HTML color names (e.g. red). Editors are encouraged to make use of Brewer palettes for charts, maps, and other entities, using this tool .
A hex triplet is a six-digit (or eight-digit), three-byte (or four-byte) hexadecimal number used in HTML, CSS, SVG, and other computing applications to represent colors.The bytes represent the red, green, and blue components of the color.
Displayed in the adjacent table is the color rich maroon, i.e. maroon as defined in the X11 color names, which is much brighter and more toned toward rose than the HTML/CSS maroon shown above. See the chart Color name clashes in the X11 color names article to see those colors that are different in HTML/CSS and X11.
You can use this template to make some text that gradually changes its colour from left to right (blah blah blah) and this template to create text that has every colour of the rainbow as a gradient (blah blah blah). To customise the color and direction of the text, you may use this template which allows customisation of text like this (blah ...
light maroon link: Link to a Wikipedia page that does not currently exist, but that you have visited: #A55858 = rgb(165,88,88) #A55858 = rgb(165,88,88) maroon link: Link to a very short article/stub within Wikipedia, but only if the user has set a preference option to format links to stubs in this way: not yet defined #772233 = rgb(119,34,51)
As a result, the combined CSS 3.0 color list that prevails on the web today produces "Dark Gray" as a significantly lighter tone than plain "Gray" , because "Dark Gray" was descended from X11 – for it did not exist in HTML nor CSS level 1 [8] – while "Gray" was descended from HTML.
Displayed at right is the web color called maroon in HTML/CSS and it is a brownish crimson color that takes its name from the French word marron, or chestnut.[4] "Marron" is also one of the French translations for "brown".
You may wish to use a style type that is already predefined by MediaWiki, or the site that you are visiting. You can also create a style that is unique to your page. Vector is the default style, you can view it at: MediaWiki:Vector.css. You will give your CSS tag an existing "class" Please put a list of existing classes here.