I need to determine whether a selected UIColor (picked by the user) is dark or bright, so I can change the color of a line of text that sits on top of that color, for better
This extension works with greyscale colors. However, if you are creating all your colors with the RGB initializer and not using the built in colors such as UIColor.black
and UIColor.white
, then possibly you can remove the additional checks.
extension UIColor {
// Check if the color is light or dark, as defined by the injected lightness threshold.
// Some people report that 0.7 is best. I suggest to find out for yourself.
// A nil value is returned if the lightness couldn't be determined.
func isLight(threshold: Float = 0.5) -> Bool? {
let originalCGColor = self.cgColor
// Now we need to convert it to the RGB colorspace. UIColor.white / UIColor.black are greyscale and not RGB.
// If you don't do this then you will crash when accessing components index 2 below when evaluating greyscale colors.
let RGBCGColor = originalCGColor.converted(to: CGColorSpaceCreateDeviceRGB(), intent: .defaultIntent, options: nil)
guard let components = RGBCGColor?.components else {
return nil
}
guard components.count >= 3 else {
return nil
}
let brightness = Float(((components[0] * 299) + (components[1] * 587) + (components[2] * 114)) / 1000)
return (brightness > threshold)
}
}
Tests:
func testItWorks() {
XCTAssertTrue(UIColor.yellow.isLight()!, "Yellow is LIGHT")
XCTAssertFalse(UIColor.black.isLight()!, "Black is DARK")
XCTAssertTrue(UIColor.white.isLight()!, "White is LIGHT")
XCTAssertFalse(UIColor.red.isLight()!, "Red is DARK")
}
Note: Updated to Swift 3 12/7/18