Is it possible to change your program so that it breaks out of the normal black and white does scheme? for instance in CMOS, it uses blue and red...thanks.
Is it possible to change your program so that it breaks out of the normal black and white does scheme? for instance in CMOS, it uses blue and red...thanks.
look at the conio.h and conio.c files
textcolor
Syntax
#include <conio.h>
void textcolor(int newcolor);
Description
Selects new character color in text mode.
Note: Do not use this function for Win32s or Win32 GUI applications.
textcolor selects the foreground character color. This function works for the console output functions. newcolor selects the new foreground color. You can set newcolor to an integer as given in the table below, or to one of the symbolic constants defined in conio.h. If you use symbolic constants, you must include conio.h.
Once you have called textcolor, all subsequent functions using direct video output (such as cprintf) will use newcolor. textcolor does not affect any characters currently onscreen.
The following table lists the allowable colors (as symbolic constants) and their numeric values:
Symbolic constant Numeric value
BLACK 0
BLUE 1
GREEN 2
CYAN 3
RED 4
MAGENTA 5
BROWN 6
LIGHTGRAY 7
DARKGRAY 8
LIGHTBLUE 9
LIGHTGREEN 10
LIGHTCYAN 11
LIGHTRED 12
LIGHTMAGENTA 13
YELLOW 14
WHITE 15
BLINK 128
You can make the characters blink by adding 128 to the foreground color. The predefined constant BLINK exists for this purpose.
For example:
textcolor(CYAN + BLINK);
Note: Some monitors do not recognize the intensity signal used to create the eight "light" colors (8-15). On such monitors, the light colors are displayed as their "dark" equivalents (0-7). Also, systems that do not display in color can treat these numbers as shades of one color, special patterns, or special attributes (such as underlined, bold, italics, and so on). Exactly what you'll see on such systems depends on your hardware.
Return Value: None.
textbackground
Syntax
#include <conio.h>
void textbackground(int newcolor);
Description
Selects new text background color.
Note: Do not use this function for Win32s or Win32 GUI applications.
textbackground selects the background color. This function works for functions that produce output in text mode directly to the screen. newcolor selects the new background color. You can set newcolor to an integer from 0 to 7, or to one of the symbolic constants defined in conio.h. If you use symbolic constants, you must include conio.h.
Once you have called textbackground, all subsequent functions using direct video output (such as cprintf) will use newcolor. textbackground does not affect any characters currently onscreen.
The following table lists the symbolic constants and the numeric values of the allowable colors:
Symbolic constant Numeric value
BLACK 0
BLUE 1
GREEN 2
CYAN 3
RED 4
MAGENTA 5
BROWN 6
LIGHTGRAY 7
Return Value: None.
Use cprintf() to print coloured text
MagosX.com
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.
NOTE: You can also use these in C++.
If you'd like to speed-anhance your program, make your own out of Assembly language. It's a basic function, so you could find out how exactly to do this by just looking in any decent book for a a minute, and also look at the aforementioned files with a text editor, to gve you an idea of the system they used,