What tools are used for working with HSL colors in .net?
问题:
回答1:
The color struct provides three methods: GetHue, GetSaturation and GetBrightness.
Bob Powell wrote an interesting piece on this several years ago.
Bizarre historical note -- "HSL" (and the related "HSV") are one of the many things originating from Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in the 70's, courtesy of Alvy Ray Smith.
回答2:
This ColorRGB class provides ways to get and set HSL, along with implicit conversions to and from System.Drawing.Color. It's based on an excellent example from GeekMonkey.com.
using System;
using System.Drawing;
namespace RMA.Drawing
{
public class ColorRGB
{
public byte R;
public byte G;
public byte B;
public byte A;
public ColorRGB()
{
R = 255;
G = 255;
B = 255;
A = 255;
}
public ColorRGB(Color value)
{
this.R = value.R;
this.G = value.G;
this.B = value.B;
this.A = value.A;
}
public static implicit operator Color(ColorRGB rgb)
{
Color c = Color.FromArgb(rgb.A, rgb.R, rgb.G, rgb.B);
return c;
}
public static explicit operator ColorRGB(Color c)
{
return new ColorRGB(c);
}
// Given H,S,L in range of 0-1
// Returns a Color (RGB struct) in range of 0-255
public static ColorRGB FromHSL(double H, double S, double L)
{
return FromHSLA(H, S, L, 1.0);
}
// Given H,S,L,A in range of 0-1
// Returns a Color (RGB struct) in range of 0-255
public static ColorRGB FromHSLA(double H, double S, double L, double A)
{
double v;
double r, g, b;
if (A > 1.0)
A = 1.0;
r = L; // default to gray
g = L;
b = L;
v = (L <= 0.5) ? (L * (1.0 + S)) : (L + S - L * S);
if (v > 0)
{
double m;
double sv;
int sextant;
double fract, vsf, mid1, mid2;
m = L + L - v;
sv = (v - m) / v;
H *= 6.0;
sextant = (int)H;
fract = H - sextant;
vsf = v * sv * fract;
mid1 = m + vsf;
mid2 = v - vsf;
switch (sextant)
{
case 0:
r = v;
g = mid1;
b = m;
break;
case 1:
r = mid2;
g = v;
b = m;
break;
case 2:
r = m;
g = v;
b = mid1;
break;
case 3:
r = m;
g = mid2;
b = v;
break;
case 4:
r = mid1;
g = m;
b = v;
break;
case 5:
r = v;
g = m;
b = mid2;
break;
}
}
ColorRGB rgb = new ColorRGB();
rgb.R = Convert.ToByte(r * 255.0f);
rgb.G = Convert.ToByte(g * 255.0f);
rgb.B = Convert.ToByte(b * 255.0f);
rgb.A = Convert.ToByte(A * 255.0f);
return rgb;
}
// Hue in range from 0.0 to 1.0
public float H
{
get
{
// Use System.Drawing.Color.GetHue, but divide by 360.0F
// because System.Drawing.Color returns hue in degrees (0 - 360)
// rather than a number between 0 and 1.
return ((Color)this).GetHue() / 360.0F;
}
}
// Saturation in range 0.0 - 1.0
public float S
{
get
{
return ((Color)this).GetSaturation();
}
}
// Lightness in range 0.0 - 1.0
public float L
{
get
{
return ((Color)this).GetBrightness();
}
}
}
}
回答3:
In addition to secretGeek's answer, to get a color from HSL values (or vice-versa), you can also use these native function calls (sample code in Visual Basic):
Public Declare Sub ColorRGBToHLS Lib "shlwapi.dll" _
(ByVal clrRGB As UInteger, _
ByRef pwHue As Short, _
ByRef pwLuminance As Short, _
ByRef pwSaturation As Short)
Public Declare Function ColorHLSToRGB Lib "shlwapi.dll" _
(ByVal wHue As Short, _
ByVal wLuminance As Short, _
ByVal wSaturation As Short) As UInteger
(using ColorTranslator.ToWin32
and ColorTranslator.FromWin32
when passing/receiving the color argument/result)