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html practice thread 1/2000 |
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Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Rt Revd Sir jOhn from Hull Date: 27 Jun 01 - 10:01 PM IT WORKS! I am very happy now, I think I will open a can of Guinness to celabrate! Anybody want a computer programmer? Noreen I am using an ADSL set top box so cant cut and paste, but thanks anyway.john |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Rt Revd Sir jOhn from Hull Date: 27 Jun 01 - 10:04 PM Good idea Noreen, Goodnight.john |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: GS Date: 11 Aug 01 - 07:50 PM Just testing please ignore me |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: GUEST,Mr Happy Date: 23 Aug 05 - 06:13 PM Blue Text |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: GUEST Date: 23 Aug 05 - 06:14 PM drat! |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Cluin Date: 23 Aug 05 - 06:24 PM Try using the word "blue" in between the quotes instead of the hex code, Mr. H. It's easier. If you insist on using hexadecimal try this site. |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: GUEST,Mr Happy Date: 23 Aug 05 - 06:36 PM Mr Happy |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: GUEST Date: 23 Aug 05 - 06:43 PM 990000 |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Jeri Date: 23 Aug 05 - 10:09 PM When you use the letters & numbers, it's called a 'hex' code. It's called that because there are 6 of them. Here's a page with some explanation and codes for some colors. I kind of like tomato and turquoise. If course, I see that typing the words tomato and turquoise works too. There's crimson, and springgreen, and aquamarine, coral, cornflowerblue... you could go crazy! |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Joe Offer Date: 23 Aug 05 - 10:26 PM It's called that because there are six of them? Dang! All this time, I thought it meant it was a hexadecimal number system, built on a base of 16....I think it was invented by alien mutants who had 16 fingers instead of ten. Or does it have to do with a witch's hex? An Amish hex? -Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Jeri Date: 23 Aug 05 - 10:46 PM ...and uf witches are so into HEXagons, why do they use pentagrams? |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Cluin Date: 23 Aug 05 - 10:49 PM `Cause chicks are bad at math. ;) |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: JennyO Date: 23 Aug 05 - 11:46 PM Not all witches are chicks. |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: MudGuard Date: 24 Aug 05 - 12:57 AM When you use the letters & numbers, it's called a 'hex' code. It's called that because there are 6 of them. Wrong. First, it's not & but # for the color codes, second, as Joe already said, it's called hex code as abbreviation of hexadecimal code. In HTML, you always use 6 digits, but in CSS, there are situations where you use 3 digits only (and it is still called hex code). e.g: <span style="background-color:#fed; color:#930; border-width:3px; border-style:solid; border-color:#f9f #9ff #369 #6fc;">some funny colors</span> which looks like some funny colors (when there are only three hex digits, the value is interpreted as if each digit had been written twice: #fed ==> #ffeedd, #930 ==> #993300, #f9f ==> #ff99ff, #9ff ==> #99ffff, #369 ==> #336699, #6fc ==> #66ffcc ...) |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 30 Oct 05 - 10:36 PM Those lazy letters |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: bobad Date: 22 Mar 06 - 11:02 AM |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Jim Dixon Date: 22 Aug 06 - 10:59 PM "Come all you handsome comely maids ..." "I am lonesome since I cross'd the hills ..." "I am lonesome since I crossed the hills ..." "I am lonesome since I crost the hill ..." "I'm lonesome since I cross'd the hills ..." "I'm lonesome since I crossed the hills ..." "My parents reared me tenderly having no child but me ..." "Now for America I'm bound ..." "Now I am bound for a foreign land ..." "Now I'm bound for a foreign land ..." "The wars are o'er, and gentle peace ..."
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Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: JennyO Date: 23 Aug 06 - 10:52 AM Well Jim, the obvious way is to highlight the area when you suspect someone has posted in white - which is what I did. The only other way I can think of is to view the source code and hunt around till you find it - rather tedious really. Are there any other ways I haven't thought of? |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Dave'sWife Date: 23 Aug 06 - 11:03 AM Srill trying to blickify the giant coyote that is NOT eating cats in West Hollywood: giant coyote OK - it's working nor OR I was just doing it ackwards before cuz I was sleep deprived - take your pick |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: bobad Date: 27 Oct 06 - 11:27 AM ♀ |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Mr Happy Date: 12 Nov 06 - 01:32 PM TEST |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Linda Goodman Zebooker Date: 21 Nov 06 - 08:16 PM The Hex code colors website that Jeri mentioned on 23 Aug 05 - 10:09 PM came in real handy today. I saw this thread on November 12, and I wrote down and saved her blue clicky. Today, as is one of my duties, I was editing my Reform Jewish Regional Office's (in Washington DC) website. Our organization's North American Headquarters in New York City has given us an easy-to-use website editor package, but they have also imposed some pretty restrictive "style" rules. We my use ONLY Arial, for example, no graphics in the background, and a 180-color pallette selection box for type or background colors. We aren't really supposed to use any color backgrounds. But in the announcement I was making for one of the upcoming classes we administer, I really wanted something to set off the text. It's a marriage-preparation class (you can quitcher giggling, now) and our "signature" color for the class's flyers, etc. is pink. Pink's not even remotely one of the colors in our official pallette, but in the editor's dialog box, as well as a place to select a preset color, there's also a place to type. Aha!, I thought. I went to the website Jeri gave, found pink was FFC0CB, typed it in the box, and, voila...an appropriately sappy shade of pink appeared behind my text. We can edit our site's html, but I wouldn't have known how to figure it out. No doubt our web-police will find my color one of these days and delete it, but meantime, it's fun to have up there. THANKS MUDCAT! (& Jeri) --Linda Goodman |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: bobad Date: 28 Nov 06 - 05:47 PM RED |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: Snuffy Date: 28 Nov 06 - 06:20 PM BLUE |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: pdq Date: 28 Nov 06 - 06:26 PM MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU!!! |
Subject: RE: html practice thread 1/2000 From: JennyO Date: 17 Mar 07 - 12:51 AM REFRESSSSSH! |
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