All monitors and TV's use the same three colors to generate the picture. The colors are red, green and blue. It is called the RGB color system and is used when the colors are the light source. For color printers where you see reflected light the colors are cyan, magenta and yellow which are the standard ink cartridge colors
2007-01-28 03:45:19
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answer #1
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answered by frozen 5
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b) blue red green
that is why color monitors are called "RGB" monitors.
Each pixel on the screen is composed of three colored dots (one Red, one Green, one Blue). By varying the intensity of the colored dots, different shades are produced. If you get really close to an old fashioned CRT screen, you can see the colored dots. As you move away, the colors blend more.
Don't confuse primary colors (red, blue, yellow) with monitor colors ( red, blue, green). Monitors use green instead of yellow due to the doping agents used to produced the colored phosphor dots.
2007-01-28 11:48:22
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answer #2
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answered by goofybob58 2
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It is called RGB
"Red Green Yellow"
2007-01-28 11:40:26
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answer #3
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answered by aRnObIe 4
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Blue, red and yellow- they are the primary colors, and all other colors are produced by mixing them in various proportions.
Actually, it is Magenta, Cyan and yellow, but for convenience sake, people say blue red and yellow.
2007-01-28 11:46:44
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answer #4
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answered by aki 2
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Read this and you will know. I don't beleive in handing anyone the answer without them doing some work.
2007-01-28 11:45:22
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answer #5
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answered by redunicorn 7
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