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rated 0 times [  125] [ 1]  / answers: 1 / hits: 25908  / 11 Years ago, mon, july 8, 2013, 12:00:00

I would like to calculate color value according to given number.



0 -> pure red
100 -> pure green

example: 75 -> color, which is 75% from red to green.


I need this for expiration counter, which shows appropriate colors as days count down.


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 Answers
17

You could indeed go for the solution provided by @KamilT. Disadvantage of this method (imo) is that the colors in the middle (around 50) will get brownish and not very nice compared to your full red and green.



I think it would be much nicer to follow the color spectrum, and passing over orange and yellow, in stead of that ugly brownish.



This can easily by achieved by working with HSL values rather then RGB values. If you set the Hue value based on your number between 0 and 100 to a value between 0°(red) and 120°(green), and keep your Saturation at 100% and your Lightness at 50%, you should get nice bright colors.



I found a way to convert between rgb and hsl here: HSL to RGB color conversion



And I wrote a simple function to calculate your rgb value using the conversion function from the answer above:



// convert a number to a color using hsl
function numberToColorHsl(i) {
// as the function expects a value between 0 and 1, and red = 0° and green = 120°
// we convert the input to the appropriate hue value
var hue = i * 1.2 / 360;
// we convert hsl to rgb (saturation 100%, lightness 50%)
var rgb = hslToRgb(hue, 1, .5);
// we format to css value and return
return 'rgb(' + rgb[0] + ',' + rgb[1] + ',' + rgb[2] + ')';
}


And I set up a fiddle to demonstrate the diffrences between the HSL method and the RGB method: http://jsfiddle.net/rE6Rk/1/



update a more versatile version:



If you do not want to work with a range from red to green, you can slightly adapt the above method. The value that determines the actual color in a hsl representation is the hue, so that's the one we'll need to calculate.



enter



If you define the range of your hue, by providing the 0 and 1 value as parameters, the calculation of the hue value becomes basic math. Have a look at the updated method:



function percentageToHsl(percentage, hue0, hue1) {
var hue = (percentage * (hue1 - hue0)) + hue0;
return 'hsl(' + hue + ', 100%, 50%)';
}


As you can see I changed the API a bit. The parameters are as follows:




  • percentage: a value between 0 and 1

  • hue0: the hue value of the color you want to get when the percentage is 0

  • hue1: the hue value of the color you want to get when the percentage is 1



Also, there is no longer a need to calculate the rgb value, modern browsers support hsl values as is.



So now you can use the method as follows:



// green(120) to red(0)
color = percentageToHsl(perc, 120, 0);

// blue(225) to pink(315)
color = percentageToHsl(perc, 225, 315);

// blue (225) to yellow(45 + 360)
color = percentageToHsl(perc, 225, 405);


So if you want to go clockwise you have to make hue0 < hue1. If you want to go counter clockwise you have to make hue0 > hue1. And since these are degrees, you can just add or subtract 360 to force the direction. You can even use this technique to wrap around the hue circle multiple times.



I've created a new fiddle to demonstrate: https://jsfiddle.net/r438s65s/


[#77136] Saturday, July 6, 2013, 11 Years  [reply] [flag answer]
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