The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
If you are using a Windows video driver that dithers some display colors
(such as a 16-color VGA video driver), you may notice that when you choose
a dithered color for text, the text is displayed in an undithered or pure
color. This is to prevent you from changing your screen to an unreadable
color combination.
MORE INFORMATION
In Excel, 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 is
displayed in pure red. However, if the worksheet or chart is opened in
Excel running under Windows with a video driver that can render that
shade of red as a pure, undithered color, it appears in the colors you
selected. An example is opening the same file on a computer on which
Windows is using a video driver that is capable of displaying 256 or
more colors.
Other colors may appear to be pure colors, but when you format text
for those colors, the text is displayed in one of the 16 colors listed
above if the video driver does not support more than 16 pure colors.
Additional query words: 3.00 3.0 3.0a 3.00a non-dithered
Keywords : |
Last Reviewed: October 21, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |