Adobe FRAMEMAKER 6.0 Manual page 94

Mif reference
Table of Contents

Advertisement

You can define a color as a tint of an existing color. Tints are colors that are mixed with white. A tint is
expressed by the percentage of the base color that is printed or displayed. A tint of 100% is equivalent to
the pure base color, and a tint of 0% is equivalent to no color at all.
You can specify overprinting for a color. However, if overprinting is set for a graphic object, the object's
setting takes precedence. When a graphic object has no overprint statement, the overprint setting for the
color is assumed.
You can set up color views to specify which colors are visible in a document. The color views for a
document are specified in the Views statement. The current view for the document is identified in a
DCurrentView statement.
The color of a FrameMaker document object is expressed in a property statement for that object. In this
manual, the syntax description of a FrameMaker document object that can have a color property includes
the appropriate color property substatement.
ColorCatalog statement
The ColorCatalog statement defines the contents of the Color Catalog. A document can have only one
ColorCatalog statement, which must appear at the top level in the order given in "MIF file layout" on
page 66.
Syntax
<ColorCatalog
<Color...>
<Color...>
...
>
Color statement
The Color statement defines a color. It must appear within the ColorCatalog statement. Note that MIF
version 5.5 and later supports multiple color libraries. The ColorPantoneValue statement has been
replaced by the ColorFamilyName and ColorInkName statements.
Defines a color (see "Color statement," next)
Additional statements as needed
End of ColorCatalog statement
ADOBE FRAMEMAKER 6.0
94
MIF Document Statements

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents