Note: This solution, although produces a valid HTML color value, that value doesn't necessarily have to be an RGB hex string as explained below. It's also significantly slower than my other solution.
A third solution would be to use the ColorTranslator
class, which works because:
The ColorTranslator.FromHtml()
method uses ColorConverter.ConvertFrom
internally (which can parse ARGB hex values).
The ColorTranslator.ToHtml
then just ignores the alpha value and only uses the RGB values to generate the string1.
Example:
Color c = ColorTranslator.FromHtml("#FFFF0000");
string rgb = ColorTranslator.ToHtml(c);
And here's some test code to show that this solution will work with all possible ARGB hex values:
try
{
// Incrementing by 5 to save time. We can use `++` to cover all possible values
// but it will take a long time to execute.
for (int a = 0; a <= 255; a += 5)
for (int r = 0; r <= 255; r += 5)
for (int g = 0; g <= 255; g += 5)
for (int b = 0; b <= 255; b += 5)
ColorTranslator.FromHtml($"#{a.ToString("X2")}{r.ToString("X2")}" +
$"{g.ToString("X2")}{b.ToString("X2")}");
Console.WriteLine("All is good!");
}
catch (FormatException ex)
{
Console.WriteLine($"Failed. Message='{ex.Message}'");
}
1However, keep in mind that ColorTranslator.ToHtml()
will not necessarily return an RGB hex string. It tries to return a color name if the color has a known color name (which works for HTML), otherwise, it resorts to RGB hex values in the format of #RRGGBB
.