If you have any questions, suggestions, or something does not work properly for you please let me know. Now here is the result of ignoring alpha values, effectively treating all colors as if they had the same alpha value. The next screen shot shows the result of counting colors while treating colors with differing alphas as individual colors themselves. Continuing with the idea of doing things opposite from before, this time selecting the “ignore alpha” option will narrow our search results, confused yet? This time instead of counting the occurrence of a specific color we are going to do the exact opposite, which is to count the number of all the unique colors used. In this next screen the option to ignore alpha values is chosen, widening the search to count any red pixel in the picture. The “ignore alpha” option serves to either narrow or widen your color search, in this case we are narrowing our search down to only red pixels with an alpha value of exactly 255. The image below shows the result of selecting to “count only the primary color.” In this case the primary color chosen is red with an alpha of 255, not transparent. The following screen shots show an image that is ![]() ![]() What probably needs the most explanation is use of the control options for this plug-in, this is best described with screen shots. This plug-in does exactly what its name implies, it counts the number of colors (or number of times a color is used) in an image.
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