token.halo: Difference between revisions

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The variable will also accept any hexadecimal color value. Hexadecimal color values do not need to be enclosed in quotes.
The variable will also accept any hexadecimal color value. Hexadecimal color values do not need to be enclosed in quotes.
[[Category:Special Variable]]
[[Category:Special Variable]]
[[Category:Macro Function]]

Latest revision as of 23:59, 4 July 2023

The variable token.halo allows programmatic querying and setting of the token's Halo, a colored border that, if set, appears around the token. In the image below, the yellow border around the token is the token's halo.

Examples

Getting the Token Halo Color

Halo color: [token.halo]

Outputs the hexadecimal value for the token halo color. In the case of the example image above, it would output #ffff00.

Setting the Token Halo Color

[h:token.halo = "red"]

or

[h:token.halo = #ff0000]

Sets the color of the token.halo to red (or the hexadecimal value #ff0000).

Removing the Token Halo

[h:token.halo="None"]

Color Names and Standard Colors

The token.halo variable accepts the following named colors (if using a named color, enclose the value in quotes):

  • Black
  • Green
  • Yellow
  • Orange
  • Red
  • Blue
  • Cyan
  • DarkGray
  • Magenta
  • Pink
  • White

The variable will also accept any hexadecimal color value. Hexadecimal color values do not need to be enclosed in quotes.