2021.2

Table Of Contents
3. Select one of the colors in the list, or click Other to set all aspects of the text style,
including text color and/or background color.
Coloring backgrounds and borders
Instead of using a style sheet (see above), you can color a background or border locally. This is
how:
1. Select an HTML element (see "Selecting an element" on page638).
2. On the Format menu, click the element. For a div element, click Box. The Formatting
dialog opens up.
3. Click the Border or Background tab.
4. Click the downward pointing arrow next to Color to select a color from the list of
predefined colors (see "Defining colors, spot colors and tints" on page779).
Alternatively, click the small rectangle to the right of the color list to open the Color Picker
dialog. In this dialog you can select a color from the color wheel. You can also choose the
color mode: RGB or CMYK. For an explanation of these two modes, see "Defining colors,
spot colors and tints" on page779; for an explanation of the other options in this dialog,
see "Color Picker" on page960.
You could also type a name or value in the Color field directly. It must be a valid color
name (see color names on w3schools), a hexadecimal color code (see w3school's color
picker), RGB color value, for example rgb(216,255,170) or CMYK color value, for
example cmyk(15%, 0%, 33%, 0%).
5. Click OK or Apply.
Color management
Color profiles can keep colors consistent across different outputs. To manage color profiles,
select Edit > Color settings; for an explanation of the options in the Color settings dialog, see
"Color Settings" on page962.
Fonts
In templates for personalized customer communications you can use the operating system's
fonts, including imported fonts.
When you are using a font that is not installed on your machine (for example, the bold or italic
variant of a regular font) Windows tries to simulate the font in the Designer. Likewise,
PlanetPress Connect tries to simulate the font in the output. It is however not guaranteed that
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