A library for dealing with Colors and pixels. It implements arbitrary color space conversion, chromatic adaptation and other color manipulations.
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Color |
There is a clear separation between color models, color spaces and alternative representations of color spaces. All are distinct at the type level. The goal is to prevent mixups of incompatible color types as well as utilize type information for conversion between them.
Currently supported:
-
Color models:
Y
RGB
HSI
HSL
HSV
YCbCr
CMYK
-
Color spaces and arbitrary conversions between them:
-
Y
- luminance -
Y'
- luma -
CIE XYZ
-
CIE L*a*b*
-
RGB
:-
sRGB
- both standardized and derived -
AdobeRGB
- both standardized and derived -
ITU:
Rec470
,Rec601
andRec709
-
Alternative representations:
HSI
HSL
HSV
YCbCr
CMYK
-
-
-
Illuminants:
- CIE1931 - 2 degree observer
- CIE1964 - 10 degree observer
- Some common alternatives
-
Chromatic adaptation:
-
VonKries adaptation with transformations:
VonKries
Bradford
(default)Fairchild
CIECAM02
CMCCAT2000
-
-
Color Standards:
- RAL
- SVG
Here is a short example how this library can be used. Here we assume a GHCi session that can be started like so:
$ stack ghci --package Color
Let's say we need find the perceived lightness as described in this StackOverflow
answer
for an RGB triple (128, 255, 65) :: (Word8, Word8, Word8)
.
Before we can attempt getting the lightness we need to do these two things:
- Figure out what is the color space of the
RGB
triplet? In particular theIlluminant
and theLinearity
of theRGB
color space. - Convert your
RGB
color toCIE L*a*b*
and then we can get theL*
out, which is the perceived lightness.
More often than not an RGB image will be encoded in non-linear sRGB color space with 8 bits per channel, so we'll use that for this example:
ghci> :set -XDataKinds
ghci> import Graphics.Color.Space
ghci> let rgb8 = ColorSRGB 128 255 65 :: Color (SRGB 'NonLinear) Word8
ghci> print rgb8
<SRGB 'NonLinear:(128,255, 65)>
Before we convert sRGB
to CIE L*a*b*
color space we need to increase the precision to
Double
, because for now Word8
is not supported by the LAB
color space implementation:
ghci> let rgb = toDouble <$> rgb8
ghci> print rgb
<SRGB 'NonLinear:( 0.5019607843137255, 1.0000000000000000, 0.2549019607843137)>
In order to convert to another color space without changing the Illuminant
we can use
convertColor
function. So here is how we convert to CIELAB and extract the perceived
lightness L*
:
ghci> let lab@(ColorLAB l _ _) = convertColor rgb :: Color (LAB D65) Double
ghci> lab
<LAB * D65:(90.0867507593648500,-65.7999116680496000,74.4643898323530600)>
ghci> l
90.08675075936485
When a change of Illuminant
is also needed during color space conversion we can use
convert
function
ghci> import Graphics.Color.Adaptation (convert)
ghci> import qualified Graphics.Color.Illuminant.CIE1964 as CIE1964
ghci> let lab@(ColorLAB l _ _) = convert rgb :: Color (LAB 'CIE1964.D50) Double
ghci> lab
<LAB CIE1964 'D50:(90.2287735564601500,-59.3846969983265500,72.9304679742930800)>
-
Color
is on a list of curated Awesome Colour resources. -
While working on this library the colour-science.org and their Python implementation of colour was used extensively as a reference.