Text Will Not Be Dithered in Excel for WindowsLast reviewed: November 3, 1994Article ID: Q73287 |
The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARYIf you are using a Windows video driver that dithers some display colors (such as a 16-color VGA video driver), you will notice that when you choose a dithered color for text in Microsoft Excel for Windows, the text will be displayed in an undithered or pure color. For example, if you format text to a dithered shade of blue with RBG (red, green, blue) values of R=255, G=64, and B=0, the text will display in pure red. However, if the worksheet or chart is opened in Microsoft Excel while running under Windows with another video driver that can render that shade of red as a pure, undithered color, it will appear correctly. An example is if you open the same file on a computer where Windows is using a video driver capable of displaying 256 or more colors.
MORE INFORMATIONThis is a Windows limitation. The same situation will occur if you choose to format text using dithered colors in PowerPoint for Windows. To get pure colors with a 16-color Windows-compatible video driver, select the appropriate RGB (red, green, blue) values for the colors so that they are not dithered. RGB values that give pure colors must be combinations of 0 and 128 or combinations of 0 and 255, as entered into the More Colors dialog in PowerPoint for Windows (not including light gray).
PURE COLOR TABLE FOR 16-COLOR VIDEO DRIVERS
Color Name Red Value Green Value Blue Value ---------- --------- ----------- ---------- Black 0 0 0 White 255 255 255 Red 255 0 0 Green 0 255 0 Blue 0 0 255 Cyan 0 255 255 Magenta 255 0 255 Yellow 255 255 0 Light gray 192 192 192 Gray 128 128 128 Dark red 128 0 0 Dark green 0 128 128 Dark blue 0 0 128 Teal 0 128 128 Purple 128 0 128 Tan 128 128 0Other colors may appear to be pure colors; however, when you format text for those colors, the text will be displayed in one of the 16 colors listed above if the video driver does not support more than 16 pure colors.
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