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Showing content from https://webplatform.github.io/docs/css/color below:

color · WebPlatform Docs

color Summary

This page explains the different mechanisms available in HTML and CSS to specify colors.

Basic HTML Color keywords

The HTML 4.01 spec defines 16 color keywords. These colors can always be rendered properly, regardless of the color resolution of the user’s display card. As an example, you can specify pure red text in CSS with the following:

color: red; /* color rendered pure red */

The Cascading Style Sheets, Level 2 Revision 1 (CSS2.1) specification includes “orange” (#FFA500) for a total of 17 color keywords.

Extended Color keywords

In addition to the colors listed above, most browsers support an extended list of color keywords. The links below point to tables of colors sorted in various ways. The named colors do not represent the full color spectrum; therefore, for best results, use RGB or HSL color values. The basic and extended color keywords are defined in the CSS Color Module Level 3 Extended Color Keywords section.

Hexadecimal and RGB Notation

An RGB color value can be specified in two ways:

color: #FF0000; /* Text rendered pure red because the red channel is set to its highest value, FF.*/

There is also a shorthand notation that is three digits long instead of six, for example #FFF. This syntax is supported by all old and new browser however, different browser, operating platforms, and monitors, sometimes display color a little differently. The three digit hex color palette is shorter then the six digit color palette. So while the shorthand will save a few bytes in size there are less color options available as a result. Consider the example for the color pure red:

color: #FF0000; /* Six total, two hexadecimal digits in each of the three parts.  */
color: #F00; /* Three total, one hexadecimal digits in each of the three parts. */
color: rgb(255,0,0) /* text rendered pure red because the red channel is set to its highest integer value, 255.*/
color: rgb(100%,0%,0%) /* text rendered pure red because the red channel is set to its highest percentage value, 100%.*/

Why 255? modern computers use 256-bit color, which means they can display around 16.7 million different colors (256 x 256 x 256; hexadecimal numbers have 16 different values, 0-9 and then a-f — 16 x 16 = 255). And since computers count from 0, not 1, the value range is 0-255, not 1-256.

RGBA Notation

In modern browsers (Opera, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Internet Explorer 9+), a counterpart to the RGB color model is supported — RGBA — which can also accept an “alpha” value specifying the opacity of a color. The format of an RGBA value is the same as RGB, with the addition of a numerical value between 0 (completely transparent and therefore invisible) and 1 (completely opaque).

color: rgba(255,0,0,0.5) /* text rendered semi-transparent red */
color: rgba(100%,0%,0%,0.5) /* text rendered semi-transparent red */
HSL and HSLA notation

Modern browsers (Opera, Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Internet Explorer 9+) also support an <acronym title="Hue Saturation Lightness">HSL</acronym> color model, which is also a function taking three values:

0° red 60 yellow 120 lime 180 cyan 240 blue 300 magenta 360 red

HSL also has a corresponding function that accepts an alpha channel value — HSLA hsla() alpha counterpart that allows you to specify opacity by using a numerical value between 1 and 0.

color: hsl(0, 100%, 50%) /* red */
color: hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5) /* semi-transparent red */

color: hsl(120, 100%, 50%) /* lime green */
color: hsl(120, 100%, 20%) /* dark green */
color: hsl(120, 100%, 80%) /* light green */
color: hsl(120, 75%, 75%)  /* pastel green */
System Colors

Note: CSS2 System Color values have been deprecated in favor of the CSS3 appearance property. If you want to emulate the look of a user interface related element or control, please use the ‘appearance’ property instead of attempting to mimic a user interface element through a combination of system colors.

It is also possible to specify system colors, so you can specify for example that you want your text to be the same color as your highlighted text; these are only supported on Windows. Unlike the named colors, system colors have no numeric RGB equivalent because the exact color is not known until the Web page is viewed on the user’s system. In this way, system colors are user-defined because users can choose their own system color scheme from the Windows Control Panel. The following table demonstrates appropriate text and background colors, as they would appear on a Windows Vista system with default colors.

Note that the system color names have been deprecated in the http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-color/ CSS Color Module Level 3] recommendation, and since they are Windows-only, so it is advisable to not use them.

For a complete list of system colors, see User-Defined System Colors.

currentColor
<article style="color:red">
  <p>This is a sample article</p>

  <div style="background-color:currentColor">
    <p>This is some kind of highlight box.</p>
  </div>
</article>
transparent keyword

Note that the CSS Color Module Level 3 spec defines a keyword transparent, which is very useful for overriding previously set colors when required. It is equivalent to rgba(0,0,0,0), which is completely transparent black.

This value used to only be defined as an override value for the background and border property, until it was defined as a true value in CSS3. transparent is supported on all properties in al modern browsers including IE9+.

Opacity property

You can set the opacity of an entire element using the opacity property.

See also Related articles Visual Effects Other articles

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