10

In most browsers I've tried, rgba() values seem to be changed once the browser parsed the CSS.

For example, the following CSS:

background-color: rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.5);

Gives the following CSS value when accessed via jQuery.css('background-color') or native CSSStyleDeclaration.getPropertyValue('background-color'):

rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.498039)

Here's a fiddle with more examples.

Chrome and Safari give different results. Firefox seems to be the only browser that reports the exact value as entered. Is this a bug or by design?

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  • 2
    I'm guessing wildly it has something to do with floating points and how computers process numbers in general.
    – adeneo
    Dec 6, 2012 at 23:28
  • Sounds as an illustration of the arbitrary world of developing web applications... :)
    – jtheman
    Dec 6, 2012 at 23:30
  • The values seem to be different enough (e.g. 0.01 -> 0.00784314) that floating point precision doesn't seem like the main culprit. I'm wondering if there's any color profile based adjustment going on. Dec 6, 2012 at 23:33
  • 8
    the "a" in "rgba" is just an 8-bit value. 127/255 is the closest to 0.5 it can come, and it equals 0.498039 Dec 6, 2012 at 23:36
  • Ah, thanks @MarkHubbart, that makes sense! Safari returns 0.496094 (127/256). One of them must be a bug. Dec 6, 2012 at 23:48

1 Answer 1

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Mark Hubbart's comment is correct.

32-bit color breaks down into four 8-bit components, each within the range 0-255: red, green, blue, and alpha. We express the alpha, or transparency, as a fraction or percentage since it helps us decimal-brained folks get a quicker idea of just how transparent it is. It is actually better thought of as opaqueness (well, opacity) since 100% transparent is 0, not 1.

Now, given 255 is the denominator for the alpha value, there is no way to express 0.5 exactly. The value you're seeing, 0.498039, comes from the nearest fraction, 127/255 (rounded to 6 decimal places). Safari returns 0.496094 which is 127/256 rounded to 6 decimal places, and to me seems a bug since that implies 257 values. I also doubt Firefox can accurately report 0.5 unless it is rounding to only 2 decimal places.

You can work around this issue in different browsers by creating a jQuery plugin that, on first execution, checks to see what value is returned with a 50% alpha, and adjust all calculations accordingly.

parseFloat(
   $('#divWith50PercentAlphaBackgroundStyle')
      .css('background-color')
      .split(',')[3],
   10
)

Then, with this value in hand, do a switch on it against the values different browsers return, and properly convert to the closest correct value you're expecting.

1
  • crbug.com/453414 - There's already a fix for Chrome (Blink), but they think it's not urgent enough to release it. Please star the issue to get it the attention it needs.
    – Noyo
    Mar 10, 2015 at 17:36

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