SetBackgroundColor Command
From GeoGebra Manual
Revision as of 19:33, 2 March 2018 by Noel Lambert (talk | contribs)
This command differs among variants of English:
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- SetBackgroundColor( <Object>, <Red>, <Green>, <Blue> )
- Changes the background color of given object. This is used for Texts and for objects in the Spreadsheet. The red, green and blue represent amount of corresponding color component, 0 being minimum and 1 maximum. Number t exceeding this interval is mapped to it using function 2\left|\frac{t}2-\mathrm round\left(\frac{t}2\right)\right|.
- SetBackgroundColor( <Object>, <"Color"> )
- Changes the background color of given object. This is used for Texts and for objects in the Spreadsheet. The color is entered as text, that may be:
- an English color name (see Reference:Colors). Some of them can be also used in national languages and are listed below.
- Note: If you use this command in a GeoGebraScript, you must use the English color names
- an hexadecimal string of the type #AARRGGBB or #RRGGBB, where AA defines transparency (00 full transparency to FF full opacity), RR defines the red component, GG the green one and BB the blue one.
- Example:
SetBackgroundColor(text1, "#80FF0000")
sets the background color of exixting text1 as Red, with a 50% transparency.
- SetBackgroundColor( <Red>, <Green>, <Blue> )
- Changes the background color of the active Graphics View
- SetBackgroundColor( <"Color"> )
- Changes the background color of the active Graphics View
- Note: If you use this command in a GeoGebraScript, you must use the English color names
- Black
- Dark Gray
- Gray
- Dark Blue
- Blue
- Dark Green
- Green
- Maroon
- Crimson
- Red
- Magenta
- Indigo
- Purple
- Brown
- Orange
- Gold
- Lime
- Cyan
- Turquoise
- Light Blue
- Aqua
- Silver
- Light Gray
- Pink
- Violet
- Yellow
- Light Yellow
- Light Orange
- Light Violet
- Light Purple
- Light Green
- White