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  1. In the W3Schools tutorials on web color, a few different representations of color are presented. Examples: red-green-blue, hue-saturation-lightness, hue-whiteness-brightness, cyan-magenta-yellow-black, and a few different color-naming standards. A new color-space standard has been created and adopted: "Rec. 2020"; it provides a much larger color space than what most computer monitors can display (the sRGB color space). Eventually, computer monitors that support the new Rec. 2020 color space should become available. When the Rec. 2020 monitors become available (a few already are!), will colors coded in the representations currently used in HTML, CSS, etc. look the same on those as they do on current sRGB monitors? Will we have to re-code those colors, or will the representations themselves adapt? I notice that current color representations assume 8 bits per primary (red-green-blue). The Rec. 2020 color space requires 10 or 12 bits per primary. It seems from this that color representation in HTML, CSS, etc. will have to adapt. Is W3C ready? What can we web programmers do to be ready? If this belongs in a different forum (HTML? CSS?), please let me know.
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