Oops....I just bumped into this thread. I have been doing some prototyping on rgb-icc/cmyk and have added some comments/questions/thoughts on another thread (http://www.nabble.com/Including-an-sRGB-color-profile--tf1373500.html)
Sorry for the confusion. The question posed here is basically the same I had wrt how to add cmyk support next to rgb-icc support. The nice thing about the rgb-icc(r,g,b,#CMYK,c,m,y,k) approach is that you can leave renderers that don't care about cmyk untouched and still give the user the option to specify his rgb values (iso relying on some conversion). I am interested in your thoughts. Thanks, Peter Jeremias Maerki-2 wrote: > > Max, > > please take a look at the following two links: > http://www.antennahouse.com/xslfo/axf4-extension.htm#rgb-icc > http://www.renderx.com/reference.html#Color_Specifiers > > I think it would be good to follow their example so we get maximum > interoperability. > > Peter (Coppens) and Max, please work together (via this list) on the > CMYK problem. You both want the same. Peter, I'll get back to you ASAP > about some estimates and pointers. Obviously, implementing the color > function is only the first step. There's enough to distribute among > yourselves on this. > > On 21.09.2006 16:35:32 Max Berger wrote: >> Hi Developers, >> >> I've just received an email from a person saying that they can't use >> fop because it has problems with CMYK color. One thing they did was >> customize fop and add a cmyk(a,b,c,d) function to describe color. >> >> Even though there is no such thing in the fo specification (there is >> rgb(), system-color(), and icc-color()) i think it would be a good >> idea to have it, as cmyk is a standard color model. It would also >> help testing if FOP can really support different color models. If its >> desirable, then I'll supply a patch implementing cmyk() > > > Jeremias Maerki > > > -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Adding-a-cmyk%28%29-color-function--tf2312348.html#a6680023 Sent from the FOP - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
