Is there is a way in CSS to make it pick a random font color from an array? I know I can do this with server side or javascript, but I am wondering if there is pure CSS way to do this.
6 Answers
CSS expressions (allowing for dynamic script content via CSS) were abominations cast in the bowels of the hell of inefficiency alongside Web Forms, only ever supported by IE7 and below. But since you asked.
<style>
blink marquee {
color: expression("rgb(" + Math.floor(Math.random() * 255)
+ "," + Math.floor(Math.random() * 255) + ","
+ Math.floor(Math.random() * 255) + ")");
}
</style>
<blink>
<marquee>
color me beautiful
</marquee>
</blink>
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ok is it just me or are people's votes for this question are totallay random? this is the correct answer– abboodFeb 20, 2013 at 16:54
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2@abbood How is this the correct answer if this only works in IE7 and below?– empzMar 27, 2014 at 4:58
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1
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1I can't really do it with this snippet. <marquee> will lead my Text to float from right to left, but this will also happen without any stylesheet. And there doesn't appear any color...– Alex CioJun 16, 2017 at 9:13
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3
This is not possible in CSS, which is firmly deterministic. You could do this with client-side JavaScript, though:
var colors = ['#ff0000', '#00ff00', '#0000ff'];
var random_color = colors[Math.floor(Math.random() * colors.length)];
document.getElementById('title').style.color = random_color;
If you're using jQuery, the last line could become
$('#title').css('color', random_color);
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1Thanks. But I was looking for a pure CSS way. Seems like it is not possible purely with CSS. Feb 20, 2013 at 16:22
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you should prolly mark explosion pills answer as the correct one.. it doesn't makes sense that the incorrect answer (by you own admission) get more votes than the correct one– abboodFeb 20, 2013 at 16:56
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2@abbood Explosion Pills's answer is interesting, but: "only ever supported by IE7 and below". It's not a realistic way to solve the OP's problem.– bdeshamFeb 20, 2013 at 16:57
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2I wouldn't suggest using them for IE7 and below to begin with Feb 20, 2013 at 18:23
Simple in JavaScript with JQuery.
You could do something like:
var hexArray = ['#hexVal','#hexVal','#hexval', '#hexval']
var randomColor = hexArray[Math.floor(Math.random() * hexArray.length)];
$("#divId").css("color",randomColor); //A class selector would work too
Which would select a new color every time the page refreshes.
This is how I did it.
The first part is a sequential order, element 1 gets color 1 etc.
Then when you are out of colors it will randomize it.
//Specify the class that you want to select
var x = document.getElementsByClassName("ms-webpart-chrome-title");
var i;
var c;
//specify the colors you want to use
var colors = ["#009933", "#006699", "#33cccc", "#99cc00", "#f60"];
var d = colors.length;
for (i = 0; i < x.length; i++){
while (i < d) {
c = i;
var random_color = colors[c];
x[i].style.borderTopColor = random_color;
i++;
}
while (i >= d) {
var random_color = colors[Math.floor(Math.random() * colors.length)];
x[i].style.borderTopColor = random_color;
i++;
}
}
without using predefined color set, to get a uniformly randomized color function
function randomColor(){
rc = "#";
for(i=0;i<6;i++){
rc += Math.floor(Math.random()*16).toString(16);
}
return rc;
}
or inline
"#"+Math.floor(Math.random() * 0x1000000).toString(16)
If you want to attribute a bunch of colors to a list of items and make it look like they are picked at random, or if you just want to avoid using the same color all the time, you can use the nth-child with mod. For example:
li:nth-child(6n) { background-color: rgb(249, 195, 141);}
li:nth-child(6n+1) { background-color: rgb(173, 255, 173);}
li:nth-child(6n+2) { background-color: rgb(255, 255, 203);}
li:nth-child(6n+3) { background-color: rgb(166, 197, 255);}
li:nth-child(6n+4) { background-color: rgb(244, 197, 242);}
li:nth-child(6n+5) { background-color: rgb(255, 174, 178);}
Of course this is not a real mathematical random, but with enough colors compared to the number visible in the page, the reader will lose track, and have an impression close to randomness.
More info here: nth-child with mod (or modulo) operator
array
in CSS.