
No problem. I agree with you, of course.

No problem. I agree with you, of course.


Sure! On a spectrum of visible light, yellow has a wavelength between red and green. Therefore, combining red and green, the average wavelength is the same as the wavelength of yellow. In fact, a yellow pixel is really just a pair of red and green pixels on most monitors (except with certain types of expensive monitors in which each pixel has red, green, and blue instead of red, green, or blue).
For reference:

I hope this helps.


I presume this depends heavily on the methid (and definition) of death.


Of course, because we have infinite RAM during the RAM crisis. /s
Believe me, as a gay man, I am confident with the bouquet smell.
I smell almost as fruity as I am. Not all of us smell like sandalwood.


I disagree on kWh.
That depends on if said person means 11 Sep 2001, Sep 2011, or Nov 2009.

I do not in any way mean to be rude or pedantic, but just FYI: you wrote “terns.” I presume you meant “teens.”

The oldest living land animal, Jonathan, is a gay tortioise.

Fantastic project, but this is the wrong community to post it in; the rules of the community clearly state that “a post must be (or contain) a qualifying data visualization.”


It is the difference between additive mixing and subtractive mixing. When you mix colors on a screen with RGB, you add light. When you mix pigments on a physical medium, you subtract the amount of light reflected (because each paint absorbs most light except the colors it reflects, which are what you see).
As a side note, when mixing in the subtractive color system, your primary colors are cyan, magenta, and yellow. That’s why a printer takes CMYK, for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. In case you were wondering, ‘K’ here is black.
The anti-LGBTQIA+ scheme appears to be anti-LGBTQIA+? Shocking. /s