Can I know where SILE's named colors come from? #1271
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Line 1 in 985b9c3 Also, should a standardized set from a pacakge be used instead? |
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The color package documentation says it is "as in HTML", and this actually seems to be the same as https://www.w3.org/TR/css-color-3/#svg-colorhttps://www.w3.org/TR/css-color-3/#svg-color That is, the 147 or so - I didn't count them - so-called "X11colors" that almost all browsers implemented, and that the SVG and CSS standard ended up standardizing or at least acknowledging. If true, this is a fairly reasonable assumption. What would be the benefit of an extra package? EDIT: The (currently 2021) Draft for CSS4 also has them, and much longer descriptions of alternate color profiles https://www.w3.org/TR/css-color-4/#named-color - Colors are such a mess... As for supporting other color profiles, such as Pantone, see e.g. for inspiration https://tex.stackexchange.com/questions/202175/using-pantone-spot-colors-in-xelatex |
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Yes, these are the standard CSS colors plus rebeccapurple. |
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I typically use a colorspace manipulation library such as colors in my own projects. There are several that have pros and cons for various use cases. I don't think we need to require any of them as dependencies, but it might be useful to have shim packages that automatically extend SILE color handling with features from those libraries if any of them are present/called for. |
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I picked an answer. |
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Yes, these are the standard CSS colors plus rebeccapurple.