1

I need to be able to extract the different between two hex colours, represented itself as a hex colour, in order to combine them at a later point using LESS.

Ideally, this would work in javascript

Mild Fuzz
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2 Answers2

8

If you want a full Javascript solution :

function parseHexColor(c) {
  var j = {};

  var s = c.replace(/^#([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})$/, function(_, r, g, b) {
    j.red = parseInt(r, 16);
    j.green = parseInt(g, 16);
    j.blue = parseInt(b, 16);

    return "";
  });

  if(s.length == 0) {
    return j;
  }
};

function colorDifference(a, b) {
  var a = parseHexColor(a);
  var b = parseHexColor(b);

  if(typeof(a) != 'undefined' && typeof(b) != 'undefined') {
    return "#" + (a.red - b.red).toString(16) + (a.green - b.green).toString(16) + (a.blue - b.blue).toString(16);
  }
};

Try yourself :

colorDifference('#FFFFFF', '#AABBCC'); // returns : "#554433"
Felix Kling
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1

In LESS you can safely perform calculations on colors, so combining two is easy as this:

{
    color: #ff0000 + #00ff00;
}

or even

{
    color: red + green;
}

EDIT:

Similarly you are able to get the difference between two colors by mere subtracting them and storing the difference in a LESS variable for later.

@difference: #ffff00 - #ff0000;

should give you #00ff00 as a result.

Petr Vostrel
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  • I get that, which is why I need to work backwards from the colours I have. Say I need to add colours x and y to make colour z. I have the values for X and Z – Mild Fuzz Mar 22 '12 at 10:54