Why does the CSS filter hue-rotate produce wierd results?

倾然丶 夕夏残阳落幕 提交于 2019-11-29 19:56:43

问题


I'm trying to emulate Photoshop's "Color Overlay" using CSS filters, and while doing so, found out the CSS filters operate on colors as consistently as an epileptic seizure.

Consider the color #FF0000. If we rotate its hue by 120deg, we should get #00FF00, and by 240deg we should get #0000FF. This is the realm of sanity. Now let's enter CSS filters:

body { font: bold 99px Arial }
span { color: #F00; }
.daltonics-wont-notice {
    -webkit-filter: hue-rotate(120deg);
    filter: hue-rotate(120deg);
}
.precision-is-overrated {
    -webkit-filter: hue-rotate(240deg);
    filter: hue-rotate(240deg);
}
<span class="red">☺</span>
<span class="daltonics-wont-notice">☹</span>
<span class="precision-is-overrated">☹</span>

What should be #00FF00 is #007100, and what should be #0000FF is #0132FF. By using hue-rotate, the hue, saturation and brightness have been set to nonsensical levels, cross-browser.

I need to catch up with Cthulhu and figure out what logic He coded so I can work around it.

Is this a wierd color space unrelated to HSV or HSL? Is it possible to translate HSV, HSL or RGB coordinates into this whimsical dimension? Does it have a name? A standard? A cult following?


回答1:


I still cannot believe this is cross-browser. I mean, I've been googling for color spaces and couldn't find any where their definition of "hue" makes sense. They pulled it completely out of their asses, as a big, spiky solid block of galvanized stupidity.

Either way, I have read the inscriptions, and after careful examination of the magic incantations, I've produced a javascript version of the horribly-broken hue-rotate algorithm browsers are currently suffering from.

Here's a jsfiddle version and here's it as a code snippet:

function calculate() {
    // Get the RGB and angle to work with.
    var color = document.getElementById('color').value;
    if (! /^[0-9A-F]{6}$/i.test(color)) return alert('Bad color!');
    var angle = document.getElementById('angle').value;
    if (! /^-?[0-9]+$/i.test(angle)) return alert('Bad angle!');
    var r = parseInt(color.substr(0, 2), 16);
    var g = parseInt(color.substr(2, 2), 16);
    var b = parseInt(color.substr(4, 2), 16);
    var angle = (parseInt(angle) % 360 + 360) % 360;
    
    // Hold your breath because what follows isn't flowers.
    
    var matrix = [ // Just remember this is the identity matrix for
        1, 0, 0,   // Reds
        0, 1, 0,   // Greens
        0, 0, 1    // Blues
    ];
    
    // Luminance coefficients.
    var lumR = 0.2126;
    var lumG = 0.7152;
    var lumB = 0.0722;
    
    // Hue rotate coefficients.
    var hueRotateR = 0.143;
    var hueRotateG = 0.140;
    var hueRotateB = 0.283;
    
    var cos = Math.cos(angle * Math.PI / 180);
    var sin = Math.sin(angle * Math.PI / 180);
    
    matrix[0] = lumR + (1 - lumR) * cos - lumR * sin;
    matrix[1] = lumG - lumG * cos - lumG * sin;
    matrix[2] = lumB - lumB * cos + (1 - lumB) * sin;
    
    matrix[3] = lumR - lumR * cos + hueRotateR * sin;
    matrix[4] = lumG + (1 - lumG) * cos + hueRotateG * sin;
    matrix[5] = lumB - lumB * cos - hueRotateB * sin;
    
    matrix[6] = lumR - lumR * cos - (1 - lumR) * sin;
    matrix[7] = lumG - lumG * cos + lumG * sin;
    matrix[8] = lumB + (1 - lumB) * cos + lumB * sin;
    
    function clamp(num) {
        return Math.round(Math.max(0, Math.min(255, num)));
    }
    
    var R = clamp(matrix[0] * r + matrix[1] * g + matrix[2] * b);
    var G = clamp(matrix[3] * r + matrix[4] * g + matrix[5] * b);
    var B = clamp(matrix[6] * r + matrix[7] * g + matrix[8] * b);
    
    // Output the result
    var result = 'The original color, rgb(' + [r,g,b] + '), '
               + 'when rotated by ' + angle + ' degrees '
               + 'by the devil\'s logic, gives you '
               + 'rgb(' + [R,G,B] + '). If I got it right.';
    document.getElementById('result').innerText = result;
}
// Listen for Enter key press.
['color', 'angle'].forEach(function(i) {
    document.getElementById(i).onkeypress = function(event) {
        var e = event || window.event, c = e.which || e.keyCode;
        if (c == '13') return calculate();
    }
});
body {
    font: 14px sans-serif;
    padding: 6px 8px;
}

input {
    width: 64px;
}
<p>
    This algorithm emulates the wierd, nonsensical and completely 
    idiotic <code>hue-rotate</code> CSS filter. I wanted to know
    how it worked, because it is out of touch with any definition
    of "hue" I've ever seen; the results it produces are stupid
    and I believe it was coded under extreme influence of meth,
    alcohol and caffeine, by a scientologist listening to Death Metal.
</p>
<span>#</span>
<input type="text" id="color" placeholder="RRGGBB">
<input type="text" id="angle" placeholder="degrees">
<button onclick="calculate()">Calculate</button>
<p id="result"></p>

Note that at some point they may find out that the algorithm was coded by an intern on April 1st that wanted to pull a prank on everyone. They may even find the dice used to choose coefficients.

One way or another, knowing the random logic employed helps me work around it, and that's why I did this. Hopefully someone will stuble upon it, and maybe some day we'll have fixed versions of hue-rotate and company shipped with browsers.


As a bonus, in case it helps anyone: this is how Sepia is calculated:

var newPixel = {
    newRed:   oldRed * 0.393 + oldGreen * 0.769 + oldBlue * 0.189,
    newGreen: oldRed * 0.349 + oldGreen * 0.686 + oldBlue * 0.168,
    newBlue:  oldRed * 0.272 + oldGreen * 0.534 + oldBlue * 0.131,
};


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29479394/why-does-the-css-filter-hue-rotate-produce-wierd-results

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