Color (gb.ncurses)

Terminal color is represented by means of "color pairs". These are just numbers, from 0 to Color.Pairs - 1 (0 being the default for everything) that are associated to a foreground and to a background color and are used as attributes for characters on the screen.
Similarly, all colors - see the color constants in this class which represent the ANSI standard ones - are just numbers from 0 to Color.Colors - 1 which are, connected to RGB values.

The more important part, however, is that one has to stick to that number representation, especially for color pairs. You can fancily color one line of text with color pair 1 (which was previously defined by you) but as soon as you change the definition of color pair 1, the line mentioned above will change to that new definition! (BTW, you access a particular color pair through the array accessors of this class)

Having said above that 0 is the default color pair for everything, think of the Window class... It is true for it also. So, using the Window.Background and Window.Foreground properties affect exactly the same color pair that was set through Window.Attributes.Color, which, in turn, is 0 per default.

I hope, it was clarified that using color will take some extra thought...

Cette classe est statique.

Cette classe se comporte comme un tableau statique en lecture seule.

Constantes
Black   The color Black
Blue   The color Blue
Cyan   The color Cyan
Green   The color Green
Magenta   The color Magenta
Red   The color Red
White   The color White
Yellow   The color Yellow

Propriétés statiques
Available   Returns if color is available.
CanChange   Returns if the color values can be changed.
Count   Returns the number of supported colors

Méthodes statiques
Set   Sets the Value of one of the colors to the provided red, green, blue combination