8

How can I translate a hex representation of a color to its corresponding name?

For example, consider the following colors:

rainbow(4)
# "#FF0000FF" "#80FF00FF" "#00FFFFFF" "#8000FFFF"

What are their names (hoping a name exist for each code)?

I discovered the function col2rgb() but it does not exaclty what I am needing.

1
  • 1
    Scrap an hex color data.frame and then fetch in this look up table for the color name. Feb 11, 2015 at 18:16

4 Answers 4

10

You may use the convenience function color.id from the plotrix package*:

Given a color specified as a hex string, find the closest match in the table of known (named) colors.

library(plotrix)
sapply(rainbow(4), color.id)
# $`#FF0000FF`
# [1] "red"  "red1"
# 
# $`#80FF00FF`
# [1] "chartreuse"  "chartreuse1"
# 
# $`#00FFFFFF`
# [1] "cyan"  "cyan1"
# 
# $`#8000FFFF`
# [1] "purple"

*Credits to Jim Lemon and his answer here: Convert color hex code to color names.

5

Perhaps not the most elegant solution, but it should get the job done:

color.names <- function(d) {
  # get RGB components of d and convert to data frame
  z2 <- as.data.frame(t(col2rgb(d)))

  # get RGB components of standard colors and convert them to data frame
  z <- as.data.frame(t(sapply(colors(distinct=T),col2rgb)))
  colnames(z) <- colnames(z2)
  z$name <- rownames(z)

  # EDIT: original answer used 'merge', which messed up the order
  library(dplyr)
  z2 %>% left_join(z) %>% select(name) 

}

color.names(rainbow(4))
#   name
# 1  red
# 2 <NA>
# 3 cyan
# 4 <NA>

The function color.names uses the same input as col2rgb, i.e.

vector of any of the three kinds of R color specifications, i.e., either a color name (as listed by colors()), a hexadecimal string of the form "#rrggbb" or "#rrggbbaa" (see rgb), or a positive integer i meaning palette()[i].

so you can use it to get the names of standard colors by doing color.names(1:8)

For computational efficiency, data set with standard colors can be precalculated as in this example:

init.color.names <- function() {
  z <- as.data.frame(t(sapply(colors(distinct=T),col2rgb)))
  colnames(z) <- colnames(z2)
  z$name <- rownames(z)
  library(dplyr)

  function(d) {
    z2 <- as.data.frame(t(col2rgb(d)))     
    z2 %>% left_join(z) %>% select(name)   }
}
cl <- init.color.names()
cl(1:3)
cl(rainbow(4))
3
  • Looks good. Thank you. The "NA" means that no name exist for this specific code? I guess that through a loop, one may seek for closely related colors that have a name.
    – Remi.b
    Feb 11, 2015 at 18:25
  • Yes, "NA' means no matching color. It is an interesting idea about the closely related colors, but I am not really sure how to properly define the distance between colors. Feb 11, 2015 at 18:35
  • you'll just want to get the three values and calculate the euclidean distance
    – OganM
    Feb 11, 2015 at 21:13
4

Probably better ways but here's one using indexing:

colors()[match(rgb(t(col2rgb(rainbow(4))), 
    maxColorValue = 255), c(rgb(t(col2rgb(colors())), maxColorValue = 255)))]


## [1] "red"  NA     "cyan" NA 
3
  • 2
    what package is 'col2hex' from? Feb 11, 2015 at 19:06
  • 1
    colors()[match(rainbow(4), paste0(col2hex(colors()),'FF'))] as an alternative to your answer Feb 11, 2015 at 19:14
  • @MaratTalipov my own reports package. I didn't mean to include it as an answer. Feb 11, 2015 at 21:21
0

This is a more "tidy approach to the problem. This creates a lookup table for the RGB hex code and color name (from colors()).

library(tidyverse)

color_lookup <- colors(distinct = TRUE) |> 
  enframe() |> 
  rename(color_name = value) |> 
  select(color_name) |> 
  mutate(rgb = map(color_name, col2rgb),
         red = map_int(rgb, 1),
         green = map_int(rgb, 2),
         blue = map_int(rgb, 3),
         rgb_hex = pmap_chr(list(red, green, blue), .f = ~rgb(..1, ..2, ..3, maxColorValue = 255)))

# A tibble: 502 x 6
   color_name    rgb             red green  blue rgb_hex
   <chr>         <list>        <int> <int> <int> <chr>  
 1 white         <int [3 x 1]>   255   255   255 #FFFFFF
 2 aliceblue     <int [3 x 1]>   240   248   255 #F0F8FF
 3 antiquewhite  <int [3 x 1]>   250   235   215 #FAEBD7
 4 antiquewhite1 <int [3 x 1]>   255   239   219 #FFEFDB
 5 antiquewhite2 <int [3 x 1]>   238   223   204 #EEDFCC
 6 antiquewhite3 <int [3 x 1]>   205   192   176 #CDC0B0
 7 antiquewhite4 <int [3 x 1]>   139   131   120 #8B8378
 8 aquamarine    <int [3 x 1]>   127   255   212 #7FFFD4
 9 aquamarine2   <int [3 x 1]>   118   238   198 #76EEC6
10 aquamarine3   <int [3 x 1]>   102   205   170 #66CDAA
# ... with 492 more rows

Then you can do a left_join with your RGB hex code to get the associated color name (if it exists in colors())

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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