66

I'm teaching a jr. high/high school web programming class, and we're starting with simple elements and attributes like font and color before moving on to CSS. I know color is deprecated and font is not included in HTML5, but for teaching purposes, I find it convenient to start with simple HTML tags and work our way up to CSS. The students get a lot of joy out of being able to change colors on a page during the first week of class. (I also teach them marquee and blink in week 1, but inform them that if they ever use them again, they will lose points).

One of the students started submitting homework with odd things in the color attribute values, like "Skittles" or "Spiderman". I started experimenting with this and discovered that just about anything you put into the color="" attribute on the font tag produces some sort of color. And it appears that the color is consistent across the latest versions of IE, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, and Safari.

I have discovered that putting "LuckyCharms" in as a CSS color DOES NOT WORK. It only seems to work where colors are expected in HTML attributes, for example font color="LuckyCharms", or body bgcolor="LuckyCharms".

I'm trying to explain to my class why this happens, and so far I haven't been able to make sense of it, or to Google a good answer. It would appear that it's being interpreted as a color code, but I can't make sense of how.

UPDATE: After some trial and error, I have determined a 5-step algorithm (using the link provided) to convert pretty much any string into the corresponding hex color. I will provide the algorithm here for the edification of future visitors:

  1. Change each non-hex character to a 0.
  2. Add 0's to the string until its length is a multiple of 3.
  3. Divide string into 3 equal parts.
  4. While the length of the sub-strings is greater than 2, and all three of the sub-strings begin with a 0, remove the leading 0s from each string.
  5. If the length of the sub-strings is still greater than 2, then truncate each substring to 2 characters.

That's it, put the substrings together and you've got your hex color code. I have verified this algorithm with about 20 different samples and compared the results using the Firefox ColorZilla add-on color picker.

Note that in this case, the rules ARE indeed specifically stated in the link specified in one of the answers and will be adhered to by all browsers. So it is something you can count on to work in any browser (should you really want to use funny color names).

11
  • 4
    Instead of teaching them how it looks, teach them what it means. Trust me, worked very well with my brother when I taught him that. Teach them good HTML, what <p> means, and what <strong> means. Then move forward to styling. Also, don't forget to mention that <font> and <color> are deprecated, and should not be used on an actual site, and are only for demonstrational purposes. Now I can read your question. :) Oct 17, 2012 at 16:50
  • Proposals to close a question, or closing a question, are not meant to say that the question was bad. Just that it’s about something that is already covered, and time would be better spent in improving the answers to the existing question than starting from scratch in answering a duplicate. Being a duplicate means that it’s about something that has interested people earlier, and has been answered; so the question is relevant, just a duplicate. Oct 17, 2012 at 16:58
  • 7
    I created a "random string to css color" converter based on your 5 steps. What do you think? Mar 10, 2013 at 19:31
  • 1
    @TimPietrusky FANTASTIC! (took me a few minutes to figure out how to work it though) Mar 11, 2013 at 15:27
  • 1
    @JeremyGoodell thanks dude! What took you so long? Is the UI that bad? I created a standalone version: randomstringtocsscolor.com and linked your question as the src. Mar 11, 2013 at 16:42

4 Answers 4

33

The HTML 5 specification includes the rules for parsing legacy colours.

They are rather long, and are designed to allow browsers to be consistent about how they handle broken code.

5
  • And none of these rules apply to CSS. CSS has its own set of rules for interpreting color values, which are pretty strict. (CSS21 and css-color-3)
    – BoltClock
    Oct 17, 2012 at 16:56
  • Ok, I think this works. I followed the instructions for legacy colors and converted "LuckyCharms" first into "LuckyCharms0" to make the length a multiple of 3, then converted it into three equal size strings: "Luck" "yCha" and "rms0", then I truncated each string like so: "Lu", "yC" and "rm". Then I got stumped for a minute, but ended up eventually converting "Lu" to "00", "yC" to "C0", and "rm" to "00". Sure enough, "00C000" appears to be the same color as "LuckyCharms". I'm not sure the class will find this exercise as interesting as I did ... Oct 17, 2012 at 17:14
  • Rats. I am now using the Firefox Colorzilla addon to see what the colors really are. LuckyCharms is actually #0CC000 so my interpretation of the parsing rules is not quite right. Oct 17, 2012 at 18:02
  • Ok, I see, I did not interpret instruction 10 correctly. LuckyCharms is indeed #0CC000 by the following rules: (1) Convert all non hex chars to 0's: 00c00C0a000; (2) Add 0s to make length a multiple of 3: 00c00C0a0000; (3) Split into 3 equal length strings: 00c0 0C0a 0000; (4) Remove leading zeroes from each string while all strings are longer than 2, and all strings still start with 0: 0c0 C0a 000; (5) truncate all strings to 2 characters: 0C C0 00. Now I can sleep tonight. Oct 17, 2012 at 18:09
  • 1
    I posted the 5-step algorithm as an UPDATE in the question above. Oct 17, 2012 at 18:51
5

Very interesting. Seems as though the browser will interpret any character it can (a-f) and leave the rest to be 0's if it can't match. For instance:

Spiderman
 00DE0 A

Still needs more experimenting though.

3
  • 1
    Spiderman first gets converted to 000de00a0 (replacing all non-hex chars with 0s), which is fine because the length is 9 (a multiple of 3), then to 000 de0 0a0, which is fine since at least one of the strings starts with something other than 0, and then truncate to 00 DE 0A, just like you said. It's essentially a 5-step algorithm. Oct 17, 2012 at 18:40
  • 1
    Am I missing something, or person with 61.5k rep wrote an answer, that is not an answer at all, that is a comment in fact and that violates everything, we know (or should know) about writing good, quality answers?
    – trejder
    Oct 16, 2014 at 12:04
  • 4
    @trejder Yes, you're missing the fact that this answer was written (almost exactly) 2 years ago, when I didn't have 61.5k. Oct 16, 2014 at 13:27
3

This is an intriguing question.

Through brief experimentation, I've found that "Luck" produces the same color (to my eyes, anyway) as "LuckyCharms" but "LuckBeALady" gets you a darker shade, while "LuckBeALadyTonight" is bluer.

BTW, my first thought was that it was acting on the recognizable hex characters, but that turns "LuckyCharms" into cca, which rendered black. Combinations of 0's and the hex chars, as Madara Uchiba suggests, failed to render the same grass green as "LuckyCharms"

Don't have an answer tho.

3
  • I thought the same thing myself about the hex codes, but discovered it didn't fly. Oct 17, 2012 at 17:02
  • According to the rules specified in the link posted by @Quentin, "LuckyCharms" = "Luck yCha rms0" = "Lu yC rm" = #00C000, "Luck" = "Luck00" = "#00C000, LuckBeALady = "Luck BeAL ady0" = "Lu Be ad" = "#00BEAD", and LuckBeALadyTonight = "LuckBe ALadyT onight = "Lu AL on" = #00A000. My testing shows that indeed, these values produce exactly the same colors. Oct 17, 2012 at 17:31
  • hmmm, not quite right, it doesn't seem to work for "adamlevine" which according to my parsing should be "adam levi ne00" or "#ADE0E0", but it's not. Oct 17, 2012 at 17:47
2

The basic answer for what is expected to happen is "it depends on the browser". One of the problems with previous versions of HTML before 5 is that it is unspecified what happens when non-standard HTML is encountered by the browser. The interpretation from @Madara Uchiha is one example of how a browser might interpret the color specification, but it's just as allowable, standards-wise, for the browser to crash or to eject the CD tray or to change the resolution of your monitor to 400x300 px. Of course, this is not ideal - so what you're seeing is one programmer's idea, at one time, as to what should happen if a non-standard HTML color specification is encountered.

The reason it doesn't happen with CSS is that it's a different parser interpreting the color. This same parser interprets the color whether it's inline CSS or in a linked-in CSS document. CSS does define what happens to an improper value when it is encountered: it is ignored, and does not affect the document at all.

I would say this is a good time to talk to the class about standards compliance, as this is a critical field of understanding for students - and some professionals I have the misfortune to know. When they say, "But color Skittles works just fine", you can tell them that it works fine when they look at it, but it's entirely possible that it would crash their instructors' browser, earning them a big fat F. That's as close to a real-world scenario as you can get, when some of us have to give up our weekends because at demo time somebody else's crappy code doesn't work correctly.

I ain't bitter though. Mostly :)

1
  • To my way of thinking, if something works the same in IE, Firefox, Chrome, Opera and Safari, it's pretty safe. But I am constantly reinforcing the notion that just because it works, doesn't mean it's correct. And that if you make a mistake in your HTML, it probably won't work in Internet Explorer 6, which some of your visitors are sure to be using. I always take points off for incorrect HTML even if the result is correct. Oct 17, 2012 at 17:19

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.