Color numbers (for example #333300) are different in DreamWeaver and Photoshop.
Anyone know a trick to find the exact match in Photoshop for a color number from DreamWeaver?
That's interesting. I would think that the same RGB hex codes would show up the same (on the same monitor, using the same gamma settings). Are they radically different, or just slightly off? Are you sure that you're using the same color model for both, and not RGB for one and HSB or CMYK for the other? You're talking about both on the display screen, not one on the screen and the other ink-on-paper? You've checked that "33" is 33-out-of-255 for both, and not 33% for one?
All other things being equal, it sounds like one or the other program might be using its own gamma settings, which would affect the appearance of the output ("slightly different", not "radically different"). I use GIMP, not Photoshop, but I think PS does have its own gamma settings. If that doesn't solve the problem, go out and Google for
photoshop dreamweaver pantone and see if anyone provides Pantone color matching between the two programs. If it involves Pantone, you'll probably have to pay real money for it.
A couple of defintions, in case you're not familiar with them:
gamma: the transfer function for how a given numeric value (e.g., 0x33) for a primary color (red, green, or blue) shows up on the screen (intensity mapping from number through a given display adapter and display screen)
Pantone: a company whose bread-and-butter is standardized color samples and matching between computer display systems and inks and dyesPhil