Reputation: 7532
I'm creating a color picker in HTML5 like the gradient below
It consists of three elements:
I have managed to create a single gradient and a single color, but I can't figure out how to overlay the solid color and two gradients together. How can I accomplish this?
(I could provide my code but it's pretty generic and wouldn't be useful)
Upvotes: 6
Views: 8429
Reputation:
You can overlay two gradients on top of each other:
Horizontal gradient
Going from white to the color (HUE degree) you want to use with 100% saturation and 50% lightness:
var grH = ctx.createLinearGradient(0, 0, ctx.canvas.width, 0);
grH.addColorStop(0, '#fff');
grH.addColorStop(1, 'hsl(' + hue + ', 100%, 50%)');
ctx.fillStyle = grH;
ctx.fillRect(0, 0, ctx.canvas.width, ctx.canvas.height);
Vertical
Going from black bottom to transparent at top.
var grV = ctx.createLinearGradient(0, 0, 0, ctx.canvas.height);
grV.addColorStop(0, 'rgba(0,0,0,0)');
grV.addColorStop(1, '#000');
ctx.fillStyle = grV;
ctx.fillRect(0, 0, ctx.canvas.width, ctx.canvas.height);
Result
Drawing the horizontal first and then the vertical on top will result in this:
As in the demo it's easy to create a slider to update the hue palette. You don't need to re-create the black to transparent gradient as in the demo - just cache it to an off-screen canvas and re-use it for each update as that gives you a bit more performance.
Hope this helps.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 1340
I do not think that the color picker would be "correct" using the method you came up with. Because the white-transparent gradient would make the left bottom corner white but it should be black.
I created a jsfiddle based on this answer. It is still tilted but I think you can figure this out yourself:
function draw(hue){
var canvas = document.getElementById("hsl-square");
var ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
for(row=0; row<=100; row++){
var grad = ctx.createLinearGradient(0, 0, 100,0);
grad.addColorStop(0, 'hsl('+hue+', 0%, '+(row)+'%)');
grad.addColorStop(1, 'hsl('+hue+', 100%, '+(row/2)+'%)');
ctx.fillStyle=grad;
ctx.fillRect(0, row, 100, 1);
console.log(row, row/2);
}
}
draw(64);
There is also a new html5 color input that works in most modern browsers: http://jsfiddle.net/4FMJM/1/
<form>
Select color: <input type="color" name="your-color">
<input type="submit">
</form>
Upvotes: 1