Would recommend the 'preventing the user from selecting a specific color', but you could simply include a check within the change
event:
document.getElementById('myColorInput').addEventListener('change', function(e){
if (e.target.value != '#ff0000') {
/* apply it */
} else {
/* do not allow it ad warn the user or something */
}
});
The action of selecting the color itself I do not think is possible, by default. But using that value further on, is all in your hands.
You could work around it by storing the value with each change, and if the check fails, revert to the original stored value (this will allow reverting to the last 'valid' value instead of only the default one, which is a nice little UX improvement):
document.getElementById('myColorInput').addEventListener('change', function(e){
var target = e.target;
var value = target.value;
var prevStoredValue = target.getAttribute('data-storedValue');
if (value != '#ff0000') {
target.setAttribute('data-storedValue', value);
/* use it further on */
} else {
if (prevStoredValue) {
target.value = prevStoredValue;
} else {
target.setAttribute('data-storedValue', '#FFFFFF'); // or any default value
};
/* do not allow it and warn the user or something */
}
});