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Hello
Pretty much as per title.
And I think I already know the answer to be honest
for example, R 123 G 85 B112
I might add that:
You'll use the
Model: RGB
submenu for that.
And this menu is percent based, so you'll need to convert your 0-255 values to 0-100%.
And these are uncalibrated colors (you can't specify a color model, white point, gamma, or anything else). But you can enter, for example sRGB values, and "tag images for color management" later in PDF rendering (with the sRGB color model elected).
Use
Print As: Process
Overprint: Overprint
unless you have a known reason to use ot
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Just create/define the colour first and then you can use it either as fill or for the border colour.
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And once the color is defined, you can apply it via either:
Table > Table Designer [Shading]
This is typically for table-wide settings and Table Catalog defaults.
or select an existing table and
Table > Custom Ruling and Shading
This is typically for local overrides and isolated cell mods.
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You're going to hate me for this.
I actually meant, can you use your own custom colours (for example, R 123 G 85 B112), or are you stuck with Framemaker's preset colours?
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View > Color > Color Definitions
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for example, R 123 G 85 B112
I might add that:
You'll use the
Model: RGB
submenu for that.
And this menu is percent based, so you'll need to convert your 0-255 values to 0-100%.
And these are uncalibrated colors (you can't specify a color model, white point, gamma, or anything else). But you can enter, for example sRGB values, and "tag images for color management" later in PDF rendering (with the sRGB color model elected).
Use
Print As: Process
Overprint: Overprint
unless you have a known reason to use other settings.
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Error7103 wrote:
for example, R 123 G 85 B112
I might add that:
You'll use the
Model: RGB
submenu for that.
And this menu is percent based, so you'll need to convert your 0-255 values to 0-100%.
And these are uncalibrated colors (you can't specify a color model, white point, gamma, or anything else). But you can enter, for example sRGB values, and "tag images for color management" later in PDF rendering (with the sRGB color model elected).
Use
Print As: Process
Overprint: Overprint
unless you have a known reason to use other settings.
Fantastic
You're a good 'un, Error7103.
Makes me realise how little I actually know about FM.
Cheers.