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% This is COLORDVI.TEX and COLORDVI.STY in text format, as of
% March 5, 1992, written by Jim Hafner, HAFNER@ALMADEN, or
% hafner@almaden.ibm.com. Modified by Tomas Rokicki to be a
% bit smaller and easier to add to.
%
% 20 Aug. 1992: Revised by J. Hafner, by adding \globalColor.
%
% This style file can be used to get color in TeX, LaTeX or more
% importantly, FoilTeX as an optional style file. It is generic in
% that the color parameters are determined by the driver's header files.
%
% It can be used with any driver which knows how to process the keywords
% in the \special commands. Currently, only versions of dvips greater
% than 5.478 (dvips is the DVI->PostScript driver by Tom Rokicki) and
% TeXview on the NeXT interpret these specials.
%
% This file can be used in any flavor of LaTeX (e.g. LaTeX, FoilTeX,
% AMS-LaTeX) by adding the keyword "colordvi" to the options in the
% \documentstyle command (e.g., "\documentstyle[colordvi]{foils}") or \input
% in any flavor of TeX (e.g. Plain TeX, eplain, AMS-TeX or any of the
% above LaTeX flavors) with the command "\input colordvi".
%
% The actual parameters for each color are determined by the device
% driver.
% For "dvips", that is the header file color.pro prepended to the
% output file by dvips. They can be overrriden by a user-supplied
% header, called by either the -h option or the "h" flag in a printer
% configuration file, or in the .dvipsrc (or its analogue on other
% systems).
%
% Most of the color names and their matches were based on the
% most recent (at time of writing) Crayola Crayon box of 64 colors.
%
% There are 68 predefined colors. At the end of this file is a
% listing of the color names and their approximate PANTONE color
% match. This is for reference purposes only.
%
% The first macro lets the user specify the background color for the
% document. It sets the background color for the current page and all
% succeeding pages, unless changed by another command of this type. To
% change the background color back to the default, issue
% \background{White}
%
\def\background#1{\special{background #1}}
%
% There are two types of text color commands. The first is in the form
% \ColorName (note the uppercase for the color name).
%
% It is called a local color command since it takes one argument
% enclosed in brackets. It writes the contents of its argument in the
% selected color. This should be used for local or nested color
% changes, since it restores the original color state when it completes.
% The second type of color command is in the form
% \textColorName
% This uses the same naming convention as before. It is called a global
% color command since it takes no arguments and simply sets the color at
% this point. No previous color information is saved. IF YOU USE THIS
% INTERNAL TO ANY LOCAL COLOR COMMAND, THE NESTING HISTORY IS LOST.
%
% This next definition is used in an invocation of a \textColorName
% macro to save the global color value in local form via the \globalColor
% macro. This new macro can then be used to protect certain regions of
% the text, like item tags and headers and footers which can be
% corrupted by local colors. In particular, item tags in lists can
% incorrectly inherit the color from a local color command immediately
% following it. The \subdef macro is invoked within the invocation of a
% global color change.
%
\def\subdef#1{\gdef\globalColor##1{\special
{color push #1}##1\special{color pop}}}
%
% Here are the global color changers, with color codes defined;
% these are used to define the small region colors.
%
% This first is for user defined color. The argument #1 is for a "CMYK"
% quadruple of intensity values between 0 and 1. (CMYK stands for Cyan,
% Magenta, Yellow and Black.) E.g., \textColor{.2 .3 .4 .1}
%
\def\textColor#1{\subdef{cmyk #1}\special{color cmyk #1}}
%
% and a userdefinable local color command.
\def\Color#1#2{\special{color push cmyk #1}#2\special{color pop}}
%
%
\def\newColor #1 {\expandafter\def\csname #1\endcsname##1{\special
{color push #1}##1\special{color pop}}%
\expandafter\def\csname text#1\endcsname{\subdef{#1}%
\special{color #1}}}%
%
% Here are the color names and their PANTONE match (approximately)
%
\newColor GreenYellow % GreenYellow Approximate PANTONE 388
\newColor Yellow % Yellow Approximate PANTONE YELLOW
\newColor Goldenrod % Goldenrod Approximate PANTONE 109
\newColor Dandelion % Dandelion Approximate PANTONE 123
\newColor Apricot % Apricot Approximate PANTONE 1565
\newColor Peach % Peach Approximate PANTONE 164
\newColor Melon % Melon Approximate PANTONE 177
\newColor YellowOrange % YellowOrange Approximate PANTONE 130
\newColor Orange % Orange Approximate PANTONE ORANGE-021
\newColor BurntOrange % BurntOrange Approximate PANTONE 388
\newColor Bittersweet % Bittersweet Approximate PANTONE 167
\newColor RedOrange % RedOrange Approximate PANTONE 179
\newColor Mahogany % Mahogany Approximate PANTONE 484
\newColor Maroon % Maroon Approximate PANTONE 201
\newColor BrickRed % BrickRed Approximate PANTONE 1805
\newColor Red % Red VERY-Approx PANTONE RED
\newColor OrangeRed % OrangeRed No PANTONE match
\newColor RubineRed % RubineRed Approximate PANTONE RUBINE-RED
\newColor WildStrawberry % WildStrawberry Approximate PANTONE 206
\newColor Salmon % Salmon Approximate PANTONE 183
\newColor CarnationPink % CarnationPink Approximate PANTONE 218
\newColor Magenta % Magenta Approximate PANTONE PROCESS-MAGENTA
\newColor VioletRed % VioletRed Approximate PANTONE 219
\newColor Rhodamine % Rhodamine Approximate PANTONE RHODAMINE-RED
\newColor Mulberry % Mulberry Approximate PANTONE 241
\newColor RedViolet % RedViolet Approximate PANTONE 234
\newColor Fuchsia % Fuchsia Approximate PANTONE 248
\newColor Lavender % Lavender Approximate PANTONE 223
\newColor Thistle % Thistle Approximate PANTONE 245
\newColor Orchid % Orchid Approximate PANTONE 252
\newColor DarkOrchid % DarkOrchid No PANTONE match
\newColor Purple % Purple Approximate PANTONE PURPLE
\newColor Plum % Plum VERY-Approx PANTONE 518
\newColor Violet % Violet Approximate PANTONE VIOLET
\newColor RoyalPurple % RoyalPurple Approximate PANTONE 267
\newColor BlueViolet % BlueViolet Approximate PANTONE 2755
\newColor Periwinkle % Periwinkle Approximate PANTONE 2715
\newColor CadetBlue % CadetBlue Approximate PANTONE (534+535)/2
\newColor CornflowerBlue % CornflowerBlue Approximate PANTONE 292
\newColor MidnightBlue % MidnightBlue Approximate PANTONE 302
\newColor NavyBlue % NavyBlue Approximate PANTONE 293
\newColor RoyalBlue % RoyalBlue No PANTONE match
\newColor Blue % Blue Approximate PANTONE BLUE-072
\newColor Cerulean % Cerulean Approximate PANTONE 3005
\newColor Cyan % Cyan Approximate PANTONE PROCESS-CYAN
\newColor ProcessBlue % ProcessBlue Approximate PANTONE PROCESS-BLUE
\newColor SkyBlue % SkyBlue Approximate PANTONE 2985
\newColor Turquoise % Turquoise Approximate PANTONE (312+313)/2
\newColor TealBlue % TealBlue Approximate PANTONE 3145
\newColor Aquamarine % Aquamarine Approximate PANTONE 3135
\newColor BlueGreen % BlueGreen Approximate PANTONE 320
\newColor Emerald % Emerald No PANTONE match
\newColor JungleGreen % JungleGreen Approximate PANTONE 328
\newColor SeaGreen % SeaGreen Approximate PANTONE 3268
\newColor Green % Green VERY-Approx PANTONE GREEN
\newColor ForestGreen % ForestGreen Approximate PANTONE 349
\newColor PineGreen % PineGreen Approximate PANTONE 323
\newColor LimeGreen % LimeGreen No PANTONE match
\newColor YellowGreen % YellowGreen Approximate PANTONE 375
\newColor SpringGreen % SpringGreen Approximate PANTONE 381
\newColor OliveGreen % OliveGreen Approximate PANTONE 582
\newColor RawSienna % RawSienna Approximate PANTONE 154
\newColor Sepia % Sepia Approximate PANTONE 161
\newColor Brown % Brown Approximate PANTONE 1615
\newColor Tan % Tan No PANTONE match
\newColor Gray % Gray Approximate PANTONE COOL-GRAY-8
\newColor Black % Black Approximate PANTONE PROCESS-BLACK
\newColor White % White No PANTONE match
% Now we make sure that we initialize the global color to Black
\subdef{Black}