Bureaucrats, developer, Administrators
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(no it's about 2.5) |
(my mistake partially) |
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:::Nonsense. A colour spectrum is about 2.5-dimensional. Go use a paint program and you will see [[hue, saturation and lightness]] and [[red, green and blue]] and [[brightness and contrast]] and [[colour balance]] controls and a selection wheel that is clearly 2-dimensional at least. | :::Nonsense. A colour spectrum is about 2.5-dimensional. Go use a paint program and you will see [[hue, saturation and lightness]] and [[red, green and blue]] and [[brightness and contrast]] and [[colour balance]] controls and a selection wheel that is clearly 2-dimensional at least. | ||
::::Umm. To be precice RGB is a '''light''' system as opposed to for instance CMYK, which is a '''color''' system. My mistake I should have said light when I wrote colour. Anyways this is off the point. All lights have a specific wave length in the spectrum, but as there can be many lights at the same time producing an infinite number of combinations they can be mapped to as many dimensions within a discreet value system i think, not sure though. --[[User:Juxo|Juxo]] 17:38, 15 Jul 2004 (EEST) |