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  2. Help:User style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:User_style

    For lines of CSS which should be different on different MediaWiki projects, e.g. for a different background color for easy distinction, clearly the local CSS cannot be used; at least these lines should be put in the user subpages. Some computers, e.g. in internet cafes, mobile devices/tablets, do not allow users to set preferences for the browser.

  3. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Accessibility/Colors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Accessibility/Colors

    Many of these web colors are used as background colors for table cell templates, particularly in the yellow-green-cyan hue range. For the blue-magenta-red range, some of these templates use slightly darker colors to achieve slightly more intense colorfulness in specific cases.

  4. Template:Background color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Background_color

    Web colors provides a list of colors which can be used. Simple colors, like black, blue, red, green, etc. can just be spelled out. Alternatively, colors can be specified using either RGB or hex notation.

  5. Wikipedia : User page design guide/Style

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:User_page_design...

    You might want to use a different color dot for separate lists, to further differentiate those lists, rather than mix them like above. When using this method, you need to end each line with "<br/>", and precede the first item in the list with that as well (at the end of the preceding line), or the items will run together.

  6. Web colors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_colors

    A hex triplet is a six-digit (or eight-digit), three-byte (or four-byte) hexadecimal number used in HTML, CSS, SVG, and other computing applications to represent colors.The bytes represent the red, green, and blue components of the color.

  7. MDN Web Docs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MDN_Web_Docs

    MDN Web Docs, previously Mozilla Developer Network and formerly Mozilla Developer Center, is a documentation repository and learning resource for web developers. It was started by Mozilla in 2005 [ 2 ] as a unified place for documentation about open web standards, Mozilla's own projects, and developer guides.

  8. Tailwind CSS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tailwind_CSS

    Tailwind CSS is an open-source CSS framework. Unlike other frameworks, like Bootstrap, it does not provide a series of predefined classes for elements such as buttons or tables. Instead, it creates a list of "utility" CSS classes that can be used to style each element by mixing and matching. [5] [6]

  9. X11 color names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X11_color_names

    As a result, the combined CSS 3.0 color list that prevails on the web today produces "Dark Gray" as a significantly lighter tone than plain "Gray" , because "Dark Gray" was descended from X11 – for it did not exist in HTML nor CSS level 1 [8] – while "Gray" was descended from HTML.