colour-2.3.3: A model for human colour/color perception

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LanguageHaskell98

Data.Colour

Contents

Description

Datatypes for representing the human perception of colour. Includes common operations for blending and compositing colours. The most common way of creating colours is either by name (see Data.Colour.Names) or by giving an sRGB triple (see Data.Colour.SRGB).

Methods of specifying Colours can be found in

Colours can be specified in a generic RGBSpace by using

Synopsis

Interfacing with Other Libraries' Colour Spaces

Executive summary: Always use Data.Colour.SRGB when interfacing with other libraries. Use toSRGB24 / sRGB24 when interfacing with libraries wanting Word8 per channel. Use toSRGB / sRGB when interfacing with libraries wanting Double or Float per channel.

Interfacing with the colour for other libraries, such as cairo (http://www.haskell.org/gtk2hs/archives/category/cairo/) and OpenGL (http://hackage.haskell.org/cgi-bin/hackage-scripts/package/OpenGL), can be a challenge because these libraries often do not use colour spaces in a consistent way. The problem is that these libraries work in a device dependent colour space and give no indication what the colour space is. For most devices this colours space is implicitly the non-linear sRGB space. However, to make matters worse, these libraries also do their compositing and blending in the device colour space. Blending and compositing ought to be done in a linear colour space, but since the device space is typically non-linear sRGB, these libraries typically produce colour blends that are too dark.

(Note that Data.Colour is a device independent colour space, and produces correct blends. e.g. compare toSRGB (blend 0.5 lime red) with RGB 0.5 0.5 0)

Because these other colour libraries can only blend in device colour spaces, they are fundamentally broken and there is no "right" way to interface with them. For most libraries, the best one can do is assume they are working with an sRGB colour space and doing incorrect blends. In these cases use Data.Colour.SRGB to convert to and from the colour coordinates. This is the best advice for interfacing with cairo.

When using OpenGL, the choice is less clear. Again, OpenGL usually does blending in the device colour space. However, because blending is an important part of proper shading, one may want to consider that OpenGL is working in a linear colour space, and the resulting rasters are improperly displayed. This is born out by the fact that OpenGL extensions that support sRGB do so by converting sRGB input/output to linear colour coordinates for processing by OpenGL.

The best way to use OpenGL, is to use proper sRGB surfaces for textures and rendering. These surfaces will automatically convert to and from OpenGL's linear colour space. In this case, use Data.Colour.SRGB.Linear to interface OpenGL's linear colour space.

If not using proper surfaces with OpenGL, then you have a choice between having OpenGL do improper blending or improper display If you are using OpenGL for 3D shading, I recommend using Data.Colour.SRGB.Linear (thus choosing improper OpenGL display). If you are not using OpenGL for 3D shading, I recommend using Data.Colour.SRGB (thus choosing improper OpenGL blending).

Colour type

data Colour a

This type represents the human preception of colour. The a parameter is a numeric type used internally for the representation.

The Monoid instance allows one to add colours, but beware that adding colours can take you out of gamut. Consider using blend whenever possible.

Instances

colourConvert :: (Fractional b, Real a) => Colour a -> Colour b

Change the type used to represent the colour coordinates.

black :: Num a => Colour a

data AlphaColour a

This type represents a Colour that may be semi-transparent.

The Monoid instance allows you to composite colours.

x `mappend` y == x `over` y

To get the (pre-multiplied) colour channel of an AlphaColour c, simply composite c over black.

c `over` black

opaque :: Num a => Colour a -> AlphaColour a

Creates an opaque AlphaColour from a Colour.

withOpacity :: Num a => Colour a -> a -> AlphaColour a

Creates an AlphaColour from a Colour with a given opacity.

c `withOpacity` o == dissolve o (opaque c) 

transparent :: Num a => AlphaColour a

This AlphaColour is entirely transparent and has no associated colour channel.

alphaColourConvert :: (Fractional b, Real a) => AlphaColour a -> AlphaColour b

Change the type used to represent the colour coordinates.

alphaChannel :: AlphaColour a -> a

Returns the opacity of an AlphaColour.

Colour operations

These operations allow combine and modify existing colours

class AffineSpace f where

Methods

affineCombo :: Num a => [(a, f a)] -> f a -> f a

Compute a affine Combination (weighted-average) of points. The last parameter will get the remaining weight. e.g.

affineCombo [(0.2,a), (0.3,b)] c == 0.2*a + 0.3*b + 0.5*c

Weights can be negative, or greater than 1.0; however, be aware that non-convex combinations may lead to out of gamut colours.

blend :: (Num a, AffineSpace f) => a -> f a -> f a -> f a

Compute the weighted average of two points. e.g.

blend 0.4 a b = 0.4*a + 0.6*b

The weight can be negative, or greater than 1.0; however, be aware that non-convex combinations may lead to out of gamut colours.

class ColourOps f where

Methods

over :: Num a => AlphaColour a -> f a -> f a

c1 `over` c2 returns the Colour created by compositing the AlphaColour c1 over c2, which may be either a Colour or AlphaColour.

darken :: Num a => a -> f a -> f a

darken s c blends a colour with black without changing it's opacity.

For Colour, darken s c = blend s c mempty

dissolve :: Num a => a -> AlphaColour a -> AlphaColour a

Returns an AlphaColour more transparent by a factor of o.

atop :: Fractional a => AlphaColour a -> AlphaColour a -> AlphaColour a

c1 `atop` c2 returns the AlphaColour produced by covering the portion of c2 visible by c1. The resulting alpha channel is always the same as the alpha channel of c2.

c1 `atop` (opaque c2) == c1 `over` (opaque c2)
AlphaChannel (c1 `atop` c2) == AlphaChannel c2