This content originally appeared on Sass Blog and was authored by Miriam Suzanne and Natalie Weizenbaum
There’s been a lot of exciting work in the CSS color specifications lately, and as it begins to land in browsers we’ve been preparing to add support for it in Sass as well. The first and largest part of that is adding support for color spaces to Sass, which represents a huge (but largely backwards-compatible) rethinking of the way colors work.
Historically, all colors in CSS have existed in the same color space, known as
“sRGB”. Whether you represent them as a hex code, an hsl()
function, or a
color name, they represented the same set of visible colors you could tell a
screen to display. While this is conceptually simple, there are some major
downsides:
As monitors have improved over time, they’ve become capable of displaying more colors than can be represented in the sRGB color space.
sRGB, even when you’re using it via
hsl()
, doesn’t correspond very well with how humans perceive colors. Cyan looks noticeably lighter than purple with the same saturation and lightness values.There’s no way to represent domain- or device-specific color spaces, such as the CMYK color space that’s used by printers.
Color spaces solve all of these problems. Now not every color has a red, green,
and blue channel (which can be interpreted as hue, saturation, and lightness).
Instead, every color has a specific color space which specifies which
channels it has. For example, the color oklch(80% 50% 90deg)
has oklch
as
its color space, 80%
lightness, 50%
chroma, and 90deg
hue.
Color Spaces in Sass permalinkColor Spaces in Sass
Today we’re announcing a proposal for how to handle color spaces in Sass. In addition to expanding Sass’s color values to support color spaces, this proposal defines Sassified versions of all the color functions in CSS Color Level 4.
Rules of Thumb permalinkRules of Thumb
There are several rules of thumb for working with color spaces in Sass:
The
rgb
,hsl
, andhwb
spaces are considered “legacy spaces”, and will often get special handling for the sake of backwards compatibility. Colors defined using hex notation or CSS color names are considered part of thergb
color space. Legacy colors are emitted in the most compatible format. This matches CSS’s own backwards-compatibility behavior.Otherwise, any color defined in a given space will remain in that space, and be emitted in that space.
Authors can explicitly convert a color’s space by using
color.to-space()
. This can be useful to enforce non-legacy behavior, by converting into a non-legacy space, or to ensure the color output is compatible with older browsers by converting colors into a legacy space before emitting.The
srgb
color space is equivalent torgb
, except that one is a legacy space, and the other is not. They also use different coordinate systems, withrgb()
accepting a range from 0-255, andsrgb
using a range of 0-1.Color functions that allow specifying a color space for manipulation will always use the source color space by default. When an explicit space is provided for manipulation, the resulting color will still be returned in the same space as the origin color. For
color.mix()
, the first color parameter is considered the origin color.All legacy and RGB-style spaces represent bounded gamuts of color. Since mapping colors into gamut is a lossy process, it should generally be left to browsers, which can map colors as-needed, based on the capabilities of a display. For that reason, out-of-gamut channel values are maintained by Sass whenever possible, even when converting into gamut-bounded color spaces. The only exception is that
hsl
andhwb
color spaces are not able to express out-of-gamut color, so converting colors into those spaces will gamut-map the colors as well. Authors can also perform explicit gamut mapping with thecolor.to-gamut()
function.Legacy browsers require colors in the
srgb
gamut. However, most modern displays support the widerdisplay-p3
gamut.
Standard CSS Color Functions permalinkStandard CSS Color Functions
oklab() and oklch() permalinkoklab()
and oklch()
The oklab()
(cubic) and oklch()
(cylindrical) functions provide access to an
unbounded gamut of colors in a perceptually uniform space. Authors can use these
functions to define reliably uniform colors. For example, the following colors
are perceptually similar in lightness and saturation:
$pink: oklch(64% 0.196 353); // hsl(329.8 70.29% 58.75%)
$blue: oklch(64% 0.196 253); // hsl(207.4 99.22% 50.69%)
The oklch()
format uses consistent “lightness” and “chroma” values, while the
hsl()
format shows dramatic changes in both “lightness” and “saturation”. As
such, oklch
is often the best space for consistent transforms.
lab() and lch() permalinklab()
and lch()
The lab()
and lch()
functions provide access to an unbounded gamut of colors
in a space that’s less perpetually-uniform but more widely-adopted than OKLab
and OKLCH.
hwb() permalinkhwb()
Sass now supports a top-level hwb()
function that uses the same syntax as
CSS’s built-in hwb()
syntax.
color() permalinkcolor()
The new color()
function provides access to a number of specialty spaces. Most
notably, display-p3
is a common space for wide-gamut monitors, making it
likely one of the more popular options for authors who simply want access to a
wider range of colors. For example, P3 greens are significantly ‘brighter’ and
more saturated than the greens available in sRGB:
$fallback-green: rgb(0% 100% 0%);
$brighter-green: color(display-p3 0 1 0);
Sass will natively support all predefined color spaces declared in the Colors Level 4 specification. It will also support unknown color spaces, although these can’t be converted to and from any other color space.
New Sass Color Functions permalinkNew Sass Color Functions
color.channel() permalinkcolor.channel()
This function returns the value of a single channel in a color. By default, it
only supports channels that are available in the color’s own space, but you can
pass the $space
parameter to return the value of the channel after converting
to the given space.
$brand: hsl(0 100% 25.1%);
// result: 25.1%
$hsl-lightness: color.channel($brand, "lightness");
// result: 37.67%
$oklch-lightness: color.channel($brand, "lightness", $space: oklch);
color.space() permalinkcolor.space()
This function returns the name of the color’s space.
// result: hsl
$hsl-space: color.space(hsl(0 100% 25.1%));
// result: oklch
$oklch-space: color.space(oklch(37.7% 38.75% 29.23deg));
color.is-in-gamut(), color.is-legacy() permalinkcolor.is-in-gamut()
, color.is-legacy()
These functions return various facts about the color. color.is-in-gamut()
returns whether the color is in-gamut for its color space (as opposed to having
one or more of its channels out of bounds, like rgb(300 0 0)
).
color.is-legacy()
returns whether the color is a legacy color in the rgb
,
hsl
, or hwb
color space.
color.is-powerless() permalinkcolor.is-powerless()
This function returns whether a given channel is “powerless” in the given color. This is a special state that’s defined for individual color spaces, which indicates that a channel’s value won’t affect how a color is displayed.
$grey: hsl(0 0% 60%);
// result: true, because saturation is 0
$hue-powerless: color.is-powerless($grey, "hue");
// result: false
$hue-powerless: color.is-powerless($grey, "lightness");
color.same() permalinkcolor.same()
This function returns whether two colors will be displayed the same way, even if
this requires converting between spaces. This is unlike the ==
operator, which
always considers colors in different non-legacy spaces to be inequal.
$orange-rgb: #ff5f00;
$orange-oklch: oklch(68.72% 20.966858279% 41.4189852913deg);
// result: false
$equal: $orange-rgb == $orange-oklch;
// result: true
$same: color.same($orange-rgb, $orange-oklch);
Existing Sass Color Functions permalinkExisting Sass Color Functions
color.scale(), color.adjust(), and color.change() permalinkcolor.scale()
, color.adjust()
, and color.change()
By default, all Sass color transformations are handled and returned in the color
space of the original color parameter. However, all relevant functions now allow
specifying an explicit color space for transformations. For example, lightness &
darkness adjustments are most reliable in oklch
:
$brand: hsl(0 100% 25.1%);
// result: hsl(0 100% 43.8%)
$hsl-lightness: color.scale($brand, $lightness: 25%);
// result: hsl(5.76 56% 45.4%)
$oklch-lightness: color.scale($brand, $lightness: 25%, $space: oklch);
Note that the returned color is still emitted in the original color space, even when the adjustment is performed in a different space.
color.mix() permalinkcolor.mix()
The color.mix()
function will retain its existing behavior for legacy color
spaces, but for new color spaces it will match CSS’s “color interpolation”
specification. This is how CSS computes which color to use in between two colors
in a gradient or an animation.
Deprecations permalinkDeprecations
A number of existing functions only make sense for legacy colors, and so are
being deprecated in favor of color-space-friendly functions like
color.channel()
and color.adjust()
:
color.red()
color.green()
color.blue()
color.hue()
color.saturation()
color.lightness()
color.whiteness()
color.blackness()
adjust-hue()
saturate()
desaturate()
transparentize()
/fade-out()
opacify()
/fade-in()
lighten()
/darken()
Let Us Know What You Think! permalinkLet Us Know What You Think!
There’s lots more detail to this proposal, and it’s not set in stone yet. We want your feedback on it! Read it over on GitHub, and file an issue with any thoughts or concerns you may have.
This content originally appeared on Sass Blog and was authored by Miriam Suzanne and Natalie Weizenbaum
Miriam Suzanne and Natalie Weizenbaum | Sciencx (2022-09-21T21:00:00+00:00) Request for Comments: Color Spaces. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2022/09/21/request-for-comments-color-spaces/
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