Color

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Before you start ...

1. It’s usually bad style to use explicit color switches in the text. It’s better to define a semantic command that takes care of the color switching. For example, instead of using \color[red]{important text}, define

\definehighlight[important][color=red]

and then use \important{important text} in the text.

2. Colors are not enabled by default in MkII. To enable colors in MkII, use

\setupcolors[state=start]

3. To disable colors in a document, use

\setupcolors[state=stop]

Last manual dedicated to color was issued in 2016

Basic Usage

To color text, use

\color[defined-color]{ ... text ... }

or

\startcolor[defined-color] 
   ... text ... 
\stopcolor

where defined-color is a color defined using \definecolor. For example, red is one of the predefined colors. So, we can use:

Three \color[red]{cool} cats

or

\startcolor[red]
\input tufte
\stopcolor


It is also possible to use RGB or CMYK or hex values to color text. The syntax for these is

\colored[settings]{... text ...}

where settings are the same settings as used by \definecolor. For example:


Three \colored[r=0.1, g=0.8, b=0.8]{colorful} cats


Note. There is no need to use the color commands directly. Almost all ConTeXt commands accept a color key, and you can use color=defined-color. For example,

  • To color the section titles red, use
\setuphead[color=red]
  • To color the footnotes red, use
\setupfootnotes[color=red]

etc.

Pre-defined colors

Default pre-defined colors

The following colors are pre-defined in ConTeXt (see colo-imp-rgb.mkiv).


Name Color Name Color Name Color Name Color
black   white  
gray   lightgray   middlegray   darkgray  
red   lightred   middlered   darkred  
green   lightgreen   middlegreen   darkgreen  
blue   lightblue   middleblue   darkblue  
cyan       middlecyan   darkcyan  
magenta       middlemagenta   darkmagenta  
yellow       middleyellow   darkyellow  

X11 Colors

In addition to the above basic color, ConTeXt also includes a definition of the X11 colors. To load this list (colo-imp-xwi.mkiv), use

\usecolors[xwi]

This loads the following additional colors:

Name Color Name Color Name Color Name Color
aliceblue   antiquewhite   aquamarine   azure  
beige   bisque   black   blanchedalmond  
blue   blueviolet   brown   burlywood  
cadetblue   chartreuse   chocolate   coral  
cornflowerblue   cornsilk   cyan   darkgoldenrod  
darkgreen   darkkhaki   darkolivegreen   darkorange  
darkorchid   darksalmon   darkseagreen   darkslateblue  
darkturquoise   darkviolet   deeppink   deepskyblue  
dodgerblue   firebrick   floralwhite   forestgreen  
gainsboro   ghostwhite   gold   goldenrod  
green   greenyellow   honeydew   hotpink  
indianred   ivory   khaki   lavender  
lavenderblush   lawngreen   lemonchiffon   lightblue  
lightcoral   lightcyan   lightgoldenrod   lightgoldenrodyellow  
lightpink   lightsalmon   lightseagreen   lightskyblue  
lightslateblue   lightsteelblue   lightyellow   limegreen  
linen   magenta   maroon   mediumaquamarine  
mediumblue   mediumorchid   mediumpurple   mediumseagreen  
mediumslateblue   mediumspringgreen   mediumturquoise   mediumvioletred  
midnightblue   mintcream   mistyrose   moccasin  
navajowhite   navy   navyblue   oldlace  
olivedrab   orange   orangered   orchid  
palegoldenrod   palegreen   paleturquoise   palevioletred  
papayawhip   peachpuff   peru   pink  
plum   powderblue   purple   red  
rosybrown   royalblue   saddlebrown   salmon  
sandybrown   seagreen   seashell   sienna  
skyblue   slateblue   snow   springgreen  
steelblue   tan   thistle   tomato  
turquoise   violet   violetred   wheat  
white   whitesmoke   yellow   yellowgreen  

Crayola crayon colors

The following colors are defined in colo-imp-crayola.mkiv. These can be loaded using

\usecolors[crayola]


Name Color Name Color Name Color Name Color
Red   Maroon   Scarlet   BrickRed  
EnglishVermilion   MadderLake   PermanentGeraniumLake   MaximumRed  
IndianRed   OrangeRed   SunsetOrange   Bittersweet  
DarkVenetianRed   VenetianRed   LightVenetianRed   VividTangerine  
MiddleRed   BurntOrange   RedOrange   Orange  
MacaroniandCheese   MiddleYellowRed   MangoTango   YellowOrange  
MaximumYellowRed   BananaMania   Maize   OrangeYellow  
Goldenrod   Dandelion   Yellow   GreenYellow  
MiddleYellow   OliveGreen   SpringGreen   MaximumYellow  
Canary   LemonYellow   MaximumGreenYellow   MiddleGreenYellow  
Inchworm   LightChromeGreen   YellowGreen   MaximumGreen  
Asparagus   GrannySmithApple   Fern   MiddleGreen  
Green   MediumChromeGreen   ForestGreen   SeaGreen  
Shamrock   MountainMeadow   JungleGreen   CaribbeanGreen  
TropicalRainForest   MiddleBlueGreen   PineGreen   MaximumBlueGreen  
RobinsEggBlue   TealBlue   LightBlue   Aquamarine  
TurquoiseBlue   OuterSpace   SkyBlue   MiddleBlue  
BlueGreen   PacificBlue   Cerulean   MaximumBlue  
BlueI   CeruleanBlue   Cornflower   GreenBlue  
MidnightBlue   NavyBlue   Denim   BlueIII  
CadetBlue   Periwinkle   BlueII   WildBlueYonder  
Indigo   Manatee   CobaltBlue   CelestialBlue  
BlueBell   MaximumBluePurple   VioletBlue   BlueViolet  
UltramarineBlue   MiddleBluePurple   PurpleHeart   RoyalPurple  
VioletII   MediumViolet   Wisteria   LavenderI  
VividViolet   MaximumPurple   PurpleMountainsMajesty   Fuchsia  
PinkFlamingo   VioletI   BrilliantRose   Orchid  
Plum   MediumRose   Thistle   Mulberry  
RedViolet   MiddlePurple   MaximumRedPurple   JazzberryJam  
Eggplant   Magenta   Cerise   WildStrawberry  
LavenderII   CottonCandy   CarnationPink   VioletRed  
Razzmatazz   PigPink   Carmine   Blush  
TickleMePink   Mauvelous   Salmon   MiddleRedPurple  
Mahogany   Melon   PinkSherbert   BurntSienna  
Brown   Sepia   FuzzyWuzzy   Beaver  
Tumbleweed   RawSienna   VanDykeBrown   Tan  
DesertSand   Peach   BurntUmber   Apricot  
Almond   RawUmber   Shadow   RawSiennaI  
Timberwolf   GoldI   GoldII   Silver  
Copper   AntiqueBrass   Black   CharcoalGray  
Gray   BlueGray   White   RadicalRed  
WildWatermelon   OutrageousOrange   AtomicTangerine   NeonCarrot  
Sunglow   LaserLemon   UnmellowYellow   ElectricLime  
ScreaminGreen   MagicMint   BlizzardBlue   ShockingPink  
RazzleDazzleRose   HotMagenta   PurplePizzazz   AztecGold  
BurnishedBrown   CeruleanFrost   CinnamonSatin   CopperPenny  
CosmicCobalt   GlossyGrape   GraniteGray   GreenSheen  
LilacLuster   MistyMoss   MysticMaroon   PearlyPurple  
PewterBlue   PolishedPine   QuickSilver   RoseDust  
RustyRed   ShadowBlue   ShinyShamrock   SteelTeal  
SugarPlum   TwilightLavender   WintergreenDream   Amethyst  
Citrine   Emerald   Jade   Jasper  
LapisLazuli   Malachite   Moonstone   Onyx  
Peridot   PinkPearl   RoseQuartz   Ruby  
Sapphire   SmokeyTopaz   TigersEye   AquaPearl  
BlackCoralPearl   CaribbeanGreenPearl   CulturedPearl   KeyLimePearl  
MandarinPearl   MidnightPearl   MysticPearl   OceanBluePearl  
OceanGreenPearl   OrchidPearl   RosePearl   SalmonPearl  
SunnyPearl   SunsetPearl  

Additional pre-defined colors

In addition to the above, there are other pre-defined colors.

x11 \usecolors[x11] colo-imp-x11.mkiv 658 extended Xorg color keywords (WWW), defined in hex RGB
crayola \usecolors[crayola] colo-imp-crayola.mkiv 235 Crayola (Binney & Smith) colors
ema \usecolors[ema] colo-imp-ema.mkiv 549 Emacs colors
RAL \usecolors[ral] colo-imp-ral.mkiv 213 RAL color system (Deutsches Institut für Gütesicherung und Kennzeichnung)
Solarized \usecolors[solarized] colo-imp-solarized.mkiv 16 solarized colors

Defining New Colors

ConTeXt supports several color models:

New colors may be defined in the following ways

Name Syntax (and Example) Explanation
RGB color model
\definecolor[...][r=..., g=..., b=...]

For example,

\definecolor[lime][r=0.75, g=1, b=0] 
This is \color[lime]{a new color}
that we defined
The values for r, g, and b are floating point number between 0 and 1.
CMYK color model
\definecolor[...][c=.., m=.., y=.., k=..]

For example,

\definecolor[lime][c=0.25, m=0, y=1, k=0] 
This is \color[lime]{a new color}
that we defined
The values for c, m, y and k are floating point number between 0 and 1.
HSV/HSL color model
\definecolor[...][h=.., s=.., v=..]

For example,

\definecolor[lime][h=75, s=1, v=1] 
This is \color[lime]{a new color}
that we defined
The value for h (hue) is between 0 and 360; the values for s (saturation), v (value/brightness) are floating point numbers between 0 and 1.
HWB color model
\definecolor[...][h=.., w=.., b=..]

For example,

\definecolor[something][h=75, w=0.5, b=.1] 
This is \color[something]{a new color}
that we defined
The value for h (hue) is between 0 and 360; the values for w (whiteness), b (blackness) are floating point numbers between 0 and 1. This mostly unknown color model is also used in CSS3/SVG.
Hex
\definecolor[...][x=...]

For example,

\definecolor[lime][x=BFFF00] 
This is \color[lime]{a new color}
that we defined
The value for x is a three-byte hexadecimal number where the bytes represent the red, green, and blue values. This follows the HTML and CSS style of defining colors.
Gray scale
\definecolor[...][s=...]

For example,

\definecolor[screen][s=0.5] 
This is \color[screen]{a new color}
that we defined
The value for s is a floating point number between 0 and 1, representing the grayness value (1 represents white, 0 represents black).

Cloning existing colors

You can clone an existing color using

\definecolor[new-color][old-color]

For example

\usecolors[xwi]
\definecolor[highlight][yellow]
\defineframed
    [important]
    [location=low, frame=off, 
     background=color, backgroundcolor=highlight]

This is a \important{important}word.

\definecolor[highlight][lavenderblush]
This is a \important{important}word.

Adapting existing colors


TODO: add details about this (See: To-Do List)


Advanced Usage

Changing color of entire document

To change the main text color of the document use

\setupcolors[textcolor=defined-color]

For example,

\setupcolors[textcolor=blue]
\starttext
text
\stoptext

Changing background color of page

The background color of the page can be changed using

\setupbackgrounds[page][background=color,backgroundcolor=defined-color]


For example,

\setuppapersize[A10]
\setupbackgrounds[page][background=color,backgroundcolor=blue]

\starttext
text
\stoptext



Using colors in MetaPost

A color defined in TeX is available in MetaPost using \MPcolor{...}. For example:

\definecolor[highlight][r=0.8,g=0.8,b=0]
\starttext
\color[highlight]{Highlighted text in TeX}

\startMPcode
label("Highlighted text in MetaPost", origin)
    withcolor \MPcolor{highlight};
\stopMPcode

Note that \MPcolor{...} behaves similar to a color primitive in MetaPost. For example, the following is valid MetaPost code.

color myColor; myColor = 0.5[\MPcolor{highlight}, white];

For more further reading: Color in MetaPost.

Testing if color is defined

To test if a color is defined, use

Usage:

\doifcolor{color-name}{... if branch ... }
\doifcolorelse{color-name}{... if branch ...}{... else branch ...}


Viewing pre-defined color

View all defined colors

To view pre-defined colors, you can use \showcolor. For example, to see all the colors defined in colo-imp-x11.mkiv, use (output truncated for display here ...)

\showcolor[x11]

If you use \showcolor without any argument, all currently defined colors are shown.

View specific defined colors

To view the components of a defined color, you can use:

\showcolorcomponents[color-1, color-2]

For example,

\showcolorcomponents[red,middlered,darkred]
\colorcompoents{defined-color}
\tranparencycomponents{defined-color}
\processcolorcomponents{defined-color}

For example,

\startlines
\colorcomponents{red}
\transparencycomponents{red}
\processcolorcomponents{red}
\stoplines


Further reading and specialized topics

  • Color Palettes
  • Transparency
  • Spot Colors
  • References
    • Paletton - Website to choose color palettes
    • ColorBrewer - website to choose colors for maps and graphics.
    • Tina Sutton, Bride M Whelan: The Complete Color Harmony. Rockport Publishers (2004). ISBN 978-1592530311 (recommanded in the mailing list)