This effect creates a problem in producing photographs and videos of line spectra or other types of highly saturated colors. Fortunately, most color in the real world contains wide bands or continuous wavelengths, and is therefore handled reasonably accurately by video.
An example of this effect in film is the color slide series THE LIGHTS ON CAMPUS: A STUDY OF ATOMIC SPECTRA, distributed by the AAPT. The hue of the continuous spectra does not change continuously throughout the spectrum, but rather the spectrum on film is formed from three uniformly colored RGB segments separated by small gaps.