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color-string
Advanced tools
Package description
The color-string npm package is a library for parsing and generating CSS color strings. It allows users to work with various color formats, convert between them, and manipulate color values.
Parsing Color Strings
This feature allows you to parse CSS color strings into an array of RGBA values.
const colorString = require('color-string');
const color = colorString.get.rgb('rgba(255, 204, 0, 0.7)');
console.log(color); // [255, 204, 0, 0.7]
Generating Color Strings
This feature enables you to generate CSS color strings from RGB(A) or HSL(A) values.
const colorString = require('color-string');
const rgbString = colorString.to.rgb([255, 204, 0]);
console.log(rgbString); // 'rgb(255, 204, 0)'
Converting Color Models
This feature allows you to convert color values between different color models, such as RGB to HSL.
const colorString = require('color-string');
const hslString = colorString.to.hsl([255, 204, 0]);
console.log(hslString); // 'hsl(45, 100%, 50%)'
The 'color' package is a powerful library for color conversion and manipulation. It supports chaining and has more manipulation functions compared to color-string.
Chroma.js is a comprehensive library for all kinds of color conversions and color scales. It offers more advanced features like color scales, interpolation, and blending compared to color-string.
TinyColor is a fast, small color manipulation and conversion library. It provides additional functionalities like color readability and random color generation, which are not present in color-string.
Readme
library for parsing and generating CSS color strings.
With npm:
$ npm install color-string
colorString.get('#FFF') // {model: 'rgb', value: [255, 255, 255, 1]}
colorString.get('#FFFA') // {model: 'rgb', value: [255, 255, 255, 0.67]}
colorString.get('#FFFFFFAA') // {model: 'rgb', value: [255, 255, 255, 0.67]}
colorString.get('hsl(360, 100%, 50%)') // {model: 'hsl', value: [0, 100, 50, 1]}
colorString.get('hsl(360 100% 50%)') // {model: 'hsl', value: [0, 100, 50, 1]}
colorString.get('hwb(60, 3%, 60%)') // {model: 'hwb', value: [60, 3, 60, 1]}
colorString.get.rgb('#FFF') // [255, 255, 255, 1]
colorString.get.rgb('blue') // [0, 0, 255, 1]
colorString.get.rgb('rgba(200, 60, 60, 0.3)') // [200, 60, 60, 0.3]
colorString.get.rgb('rgba(200 60 60 / 0.3)') // [200, 60, 60, 0.3]
colorString.get.rgb('rgba(200 60 60 / 30%)') // [200, 60, 60, 0.3]
colorString.get.rgb('rgb(200, 200, 200)') // [200, 200, 200, 1]
colorString.get.rgb('rgb(200 200 200)') // [200, 200, 200, 1]
colorString.get.hsl('hsl(360, 100%, 50%)') // [0, 100, 50, 1]
colorString.get.hsl('hsl(360 100% 50%)') // [0, 100, 50, 1]
colorString.get.hsl('hsla(360, 60%, 50%, 0.4)') // [0, 60, 50, 0.4]
colorString.get.hsl('hsl(360 60% 50% / 0.4)') // [0, 60, 50, 0.4]
colorString.get.hwb('hwb(60, 3%, 60%)') // [60, 3, 60, 1]
colorString.get.hwb('hwb(60, 3%, 60%, 0.6)') // [60, 3, 60, 0.6]
colorString.get.rgb('invalid color string') // null
colorString.to.hex([255, 255, 255]) // "#FFFFFF"
colorString.to.hex([0, 0, 255, 0.4]) // "#0000FF66"
colorString.to.hex([0, 0, 255], 0.4) // "#0000FF66"
colorString.to.rgb([255, 255, 255]) // "rgb(255, 255, 255)"
colorString.to.rgb([0, 0, 255, 0.4]) // "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.4)"
colorString.to.rgb([0, 0, 255], 0.4) // "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.4)"
colorString.to.rgb.percent([0, 0, 255]) // "rgb(0%, 0%, 100%)"
colorString.to.keyword([255, 255, 0]) // "yellow"
colorString.to.hsl([360, 100, 100]) // "hsl(360, 100%, 100%)"
colorString.to.hwb([50, 3, 15]) // "hwb(50, 3%, 15%)"
// all functions also support swizzling
colorString.to.rgb(0, [0, 255], 0.4) // "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.4)"
colorString.to.rgb([0, 0], [255], 0.4) // "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.4)"
colorString.to.rgb([0], 0, [255, 0.4]) // "rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.4)"
FAQs
Parser and generator for CSS color strings
The npm package color-string receives a total of 15,562,348 weekly downloads. As such, color-string popularity was classified as popular.
We found that color-string demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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