Hexahue is a series of combinations of 9 overall colors: Red, Green, Blue, Yellow, Cyan, Purple, Black, White, and Gray that combine and alter (like numbers) in sets of 2x3 squares of 6 colors to form the letters of the English Alphabet, as well as the decimal numbers (0-9), a space, and several punctuation marks, so far, in a set of patterns.
Hexahue Alphabet
1 Dollar is Worth 1,000 Universes.
I think, therefore I am. I dream, therefore I exist.
Hexahue is a very flexible alphabet. The all-black squares can be used for spacing in place of the all-white squares and vice versa. The alphabet shown near the top of the page is a "standard" example of how to write different characters in Hexahue. The black and white "checkers" make up ALL the common punctuation marks, which means that simply these two variations can write any common punctuation character, such as ".,()[]{}!?%$-+/*". A way to decide which Hexahue square can represent which character is to sort of meditate on the Hexahue squares and the English characters themselves. What I get out of it: All the beginning parenthesis marks can correspond with the Hexahue "comma" square (as shown in the alphabet above), and you'll notice that the black hexasquares (hexasquare: one of the 6 smaller squares which form the Hexahue square) sort of form a beginning parenthesis mark. So, the other punctuation square can become the ending parenthesis mark, and the black hexasquares also appear to form an ending parenthesis mark. No wonder it was made into a period, which ENDS a sentence! As far as the other punctuation marks, there is only short of infinite probability of what the mind can conceive for them...