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		 (04-26-2024, 09:41 AM)Krikor Wrote:  But yesterday the answer came so easily that I wondered how I hadn't figured it out sooner. 
It's always like this, once we know the answer everything is easy. 
OKey.... and the the answers is... ?  
I mean, how did you cheat?
	  
	
	
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		 (04-26-2024, 06:45 PM)PixLab Wrote:   (04-26-2024, 09:41 AM)Krikor Wrote:  But yesterday the answer came so easily that I wondered how I hadn't figured it out sooner. 
It's always like this, once we know the answer everything is easy. 
 
OKey.... and the the answers is... ?  
I mean, how did you cheat? 
Hi  PixLab,     
If I told you:
 "Plenty of apps to show the RGB value of any pixel on your screen, directly or indirectly. With Gimp only: File > Create > Screen shot plus pointer dialog, on Linux you probably have xmag already installed." 
Would that be enough of an answer for you?     
	 
	
	
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		 (04-26-2024, 10:24 PM)Krikor Wrote:  Hi PixLab,     
 
If I told you: 
"Plenty of apps to show the RGB value of any pixel on your screen, directly or indirectly. With Gimp only: File > Create > Screen shot plus pointer dialog, on Linux you probably have xmag already installed." 
 
Would that be enough of an answer for you?     
yes, I have Gpick and MATE color picker, but they give hexa, RGB and HSL, but not the "Hexadecimal" as #123, but #123456... 
How do you transform #123456 to ➤ #123?  
if simple color could work, like #ff00ff ➤ #f0f, how do you do #2a64c2 to #123? Do you do (2+a)/2, then (6+4)/2 and (c+2)/2 ?
	  
	
	
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		 (04-27-2024, 02:40 AM)PixLab Wrote:   (04-26-2024, 10:24 PM)Krikor Wrote:  Hi PixLab,     
 
If I told you: 
"Plenty of apps to show the RGB value of any pixel on your screen, directly or indirectly. With Gimp only: File > Create > Screen shot plus pointer dialog, on Linux you probably have xmag already installed." 
 
Would that be enough of an answer for you?     
 
yes, I have Gpick and MATE color picker, but they give hexa, RGB and HSL, but not the "Hexadecimal" as #123, but #123456... 
How do you transform #123456 to ➤ #123?  
if simple color could work, like #ff00ff ➤ #f0f, how do you do #2a64c2 to #123? Do you do (2+a)/2, then (6+4)/2 and (c+2)/2 ?You raised a great question. 
 
As I wrote before, I found the solution by chance, just by paying attention to a small detail and Eureka! 
 
But I only did this once, which was in the example I posted, and I didn't realize that there could be other cases like the one you mentioned (#2a64c2). 
 
So I tried to figure out how to do the conversion for the case of repeated pair codes (aabbcc, 112233, etc). 
 
I wasn't able to. 
 
But, my failure was that I tried to find a color # on the Guess My RGB website that was not a repeating pair and see what code would be generated. 
With this I would try to understand how the conversion was done, trying to achieve the same result. 
 
What happened is that I tried on almost 20 new colors and they were all in the form of repeating pairs. 
 
Therefore, I believe that there will not be colors like #2a64c2 among the colors generated on the website, but always colors in pairs. 
	 
	
	
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		04-27-2024, 08:44 AM 
(This post was last modified: 04-27-2024, 08:51 AM by rich2005.)
	
	 
	
		I do not really get that site    Also I do not quite understand the confusion. In hex it is RRGGBBAA the extra that does not show in Gimp color picker is the Alpha channel.  You get a better display in Inkscape. This made in Gimp with 50 transparency. 80 hex = 128 halfway between 0 and 255 ie 50 % 
     
so you want #123456 -> #123 , that does not make sense If you want 3 numbers, it is decimal 191, 245, 139
	  
	
	
	
		
	 
 
 
	
	
	
		
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		 (04-27-2024, 08:44 AM)rich2005 Wrote:  I do not really get that site   Also I do not quite understand the confusion. In hex it is RRGGBBAA the extra that does not show in Gimp color picker is the Alpha channel.  You get a better display in Inkscape. This made in Gimp with 50 transparency. 80 hex = 128 halfway between 0 and 255 ie 50 %  
 
 
 
so you want #123456 -> #123 , that does not make sense If you want 3 numbers, it is decimal 191, 245, 139 
rich2005,
 
The situation raised here is that on the " Guess My RGB" website there is a background color that must be identified. 
To do this, you need to slide the slides until we find a color similar to the background color. 
What happens is that the solution given on this site is in the format #a2e (3 numbers) obtained from the color #aa22ee.
 
In other words, for each RGB color there are always pairs for each color: (# aa 22 ee), (# ff 00 bb) and so on. 
Resulting in answers with 3 numbers like: (#a23), (#f0b), etc.
 
The question was what the answer would be if a background color was of the type #b58f38 (without repetition), which was presented in the format of 3 numbers.     
I haven't figured out that answer.
 
But I found that all the colors that appeared as a background color on this site; in a sample of 20 attempts, they were in the format #aabbcc (repeated pairs).
 
Knowing this, it is easy to find the value of the background color "with help" (cheating).
	  
	
	
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