$COLOR: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Navigation:
Main Page with Articles and Tutorials
Keyword Reference - Alphabetical
Keyword Reference - By usage
Report a broken link
No edit summary Tag: Reverted |
No edit summary Tags: Undo Reverted |
||
Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
{{Cl|$COLOR}}:32 | {{Cl|$COLOR}}:32 | ||
{{Cl|$NOPREFIX}} | {{Cl|$NOPREFIX}} | ||
{{Cl|COLOR}} NP_Red, White 'notice the NP_ in front of Red? | {{Cl|COLOR}} NP_Red, White 'notice the NP_ in front of Red? | ||
'This is to distinguish the color from the command with $NOPREFIX. | 'This is to distinguish the color from the command with $NOPREFIX. | ||
{{Cl|PRINT}} "Red on White." | {{Cl|PRINT}} "Red on White." | ||
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
{{PageSeeAlso}} | {{PageSeeAlso}} | ||
* [[COLOR]], [[SCREEN]] | * [[COLOR]], [[SCREEN]] | ||
* [[_NEWIMAGE]], [[$INCLUDE]] | * [[_NEWIMAGE]], [[$INCLUDE]] | ||
* [[Metacommand]] | * [[Metacommand]] |
Revision as of 18:20, 22 January 2023
$COLOR is a metacommand that adds named color constants in a program.
Syntax
Description
- $COLOR:0 adds constants for colors 0-15. The actual constant names can be found in the file source/utilities/color0.bi.
- $COLOR:32 adds constants for 32-bit colors, similar to HTML color names. The actual constant names can be found in the file source/utilities/color32.bi.
- $COLOR is a shorthand to manually using $INCLUDE pointing to the files listed above.
- Prior to QB64-PE v0.5.0, $COLOR was not compatible with $NOPREFIX.
- Since QB64-PE v0.5.0, $COLOR can now be used with $NOPREFIX, with a few notable differences to three conflicting colors -- Red, Green, Blue.
- Red would conflict with _RED, Green would conflict with _GREEN, and Blue would conflict with _BLUE, once the underscore was removed from those commands with $NOPREFIX.
- To prevent these conflicts, the COLOR values have had NP_ prepended to the front of them, to distinguish them from the non-prefixed command names. All other color names remain the same, with only the three colors in conflict having to use NP_ (for No Prefix) in front of them.
Examples
- Example 1
- Adding named color constants for SCREEN 0.
$COLOR:0 COLOR BrightWhite, Red PRINT "Bright white on red." |
Bright white on red.
|
- Example 2
- Adding named color constants for 32-bit modes.
SCREEN _NEWIMAGE(640, 400, 32) $COLOR:32 COLOR CrayolaGold, DarkCyan PRINT "CrayolaGold on DarkCyan." |
- Example 3
- Adding named color constants for 32-bit modes (with $NOPREFIX in effect).
SCREEN _NEWIMAGE(640, 400, 32) $COLOR:32 $NOPREFIX COLOR NP_Red, White 'notice the NP_ in front of Red? 'This is to distinguish the color from the command with $NOPREFIX. PRINT "Red on White." |
See also