utils.parseColor = function (color, toNumber) {
if (toNumber === true) {
if (typeof color === 'number') {
return (color | 0); //chop off decimal
}
if (typeof color === 'string' && color[0] === '#') {
color = color.slice(1);
}
return window.parseInt(color, 16);
} else {
if (typeof color === 'number') {
//make sure our hexadecimal number is padded out
color = '#' + ('00000' + (color | 0).toString(16)).substr(-6);
}
return color;
}
};
I encountered this piece of code. It is a utility function in JavaScript that will convert colors back and forth between numbers and strings. There are 2 parts that I am not so sure of:
What does
return (color|0);
mean? What is|
? in JavaScript?In the line
color = '#' + ('00000' + (color | 0).toString(16)).substr(-6);
, why do I need to make sure the hexadecimal number is padded out? What are we trying to achieve here?
Calling the function with a hexadecimal number like utils.parseColor(0xFFFF00)
, returns the string
value: "#ffff00"
. Passing a CSS-style hexadecimal string returns the same string unmodified. The
function also accepts a second, optional, parameter toNumber
, which if set to true
, returns a numeric
color value. For example, calling utils.parseColor("#FFFF00", true)
or
utils.parseColor(0xFFFF00, true)
, both return the number 16776960
.