In industrial settings, you don't normally see as many wire colors. You label both ends of each wire and there is a set scheme for deriving the wire numbers. For example;
Brown, orange and yellow are the 3 phases for a 480v/277v wiring sytem.
Black, red and blue are the 3 phases for 240/120v system.
White or gray for the neutrals
Green or green with yellow trace for grounds
Red for 120v control wiring
Yellow for 120v power from a separate source outside the panel (this warns you that it is still energized when the panel main disconnect is off)
Blue for 24volt control wiring
White or blue/white fir 24v neutral
European 24v system may use brown for 24v and blue for neutral
A multiconductor control cable will often use all the same color, usually blue or black, for everything except ground. The wires have numbers printed on them starting with 1 and working up. But when they break out if the cable and terminate, they receive a label designating what they are in the wiring diagrams.
Communications cables with twisted pairs will have their own color standards.
When numbering wires, the standard we use, which is very common, comes from the wiring g diagram book. Each page has one or 2 columns with numbers down the left side. So, on page 100, the numbers going down the left side start at 100 and increase numerically. So, a wire that originates on page 100 in row 1004 will be wire number 10041 at both ends. If that wire terminates at a pushbutton, which will be labeled PB1004, then the wire leaving the other side if PB1004 in the row will be wire number 10042 at both ends. It all makes sense and is easy to follow, once you learn this simple system. If wire 10042 continues to page 206, there will be a notation stating this. Go to page 206 and you will see wire 10042 terminating at some device, like a contactor coil in row 2067. Then the neutral on the other side of the coil will probably be wire 10002, which originated at the 24volt power supply in row 0 on page 100.
Simple. huh?