I Think VLink Means Visited Link.
Visited link...... I think!!
The default is nofill or no colour. It just appears as white.
By default there is no border around a chart title. When you do set a border the default colour is black.
no particular reason its just the default colour if you dont like it you can change the colour on your settings
the helm NEEDS to say colour custom, if it does not say that then the helm is the default colour that you see it as
encloses the main body of the document. The attribute Alink="..." specifies the color of the activated link on the page. Vlink=".."specifies the color of the followed links (clicked on or visited already) in the page. other body attributes include: bgcolor="..." the background color of the page.or Text="..." specifies the color of the text in the page.
A default is an existing setting. So in Excel when you type something into a cell, a font has already been set, a size has already been set, a colour is already set and so on. You can then change any of those things, but their initial settings are the default settings.
The bed colour is dependant on your texture pack. The default is red, but in some texture packs, it is blue. If you're using the default texture pack, your beds will always be red, there's no way to craft a non-red one. But likewise if you have a different texture pack, all the beds will be blue by default.
Go to Tools Colour Management Default Setting and check the Preserve 100% black box:-)
An alink is an "active link." The alink declaration in CSS is used to adjust the styling of the link between the time that the user clicks it, and the time that the resource it points to loads. If you're on a fast connection, or you're visiting a page you've visited before, you might not even see the alink styles happen.A vlink is a "visited link." The vlink declaration in CSS is used to adjust the styling of a link after it has been visited. In most modern browsers, links, by defaul, are blue with an underline, and vlinks are underlined and purple.
A default is a standard setting, the way something is to start with, before any changes are made. In all software programs there are all initial standard settings for things when you begin, like the size and colour of the text in them. These are the defaults. You can change them afterwards, and even change what the default values are, to save you changing things every time you start a program.When you open Excel, there are always 3 sheets there, which is the default amount. You can add more or take some away, but it always starts at 3. So it can be said that by default, an Excel workbook contains 3 sheets.