<B><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#ff334d"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#">T<SMALL>E</SMALL>X was not designed with colour in mind, and producing colours
requires a lot of help from the driver program. Thus, depending on the
driver, some or all features of the <#131#>color<#131#> package may not be
<B><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#ff334d"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#">Some drivers do not maintain a special `colour stack'. These drivers are
likely to get confused if you nest colour changes, or use colours in
<B><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#ff334d"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#">Some drivers do not maintain colours over a page break, so that if the
page breaks in the middle of a coloured paragraph, the last part of the
<B><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#ff334d"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#"><FONT COLOR="#">There is a different type of problem that will occur for all drivers.
Due to certain technical difficulties<A NAME="tex2html1" HREF="footnode_mn.html#foot343" TARGET="footer"><SUP><tex2html_footnote_mark></SUP></A>, it is possible that at points
where the colour changes, the <I>spacing</I> is affected. For this
reason the |monochrome| option does not completely disable the colour
commands, it redefines them to write to the log file. This will have the
same effects on spacing, so you can produce monochrome drafts of your
document, at least knowing that the final spacing is being shown.