Generate dynamic and themable color palettes using CSS custom properties, and allow (persistent) user-adjustments with a bit of light-weight JS.
We provide both the Sass, and a pre-built CSS file. Both allow adjustments to default settings -- but only the Sass files can change how many colors are generated.
Download the files from GitHub, or install using npm or yarn:
npm install cascading-color-systems --save-dev
yarn add cascading-color-systems --dev
The default configuration can be used as plain CSS:
/* css */
@import "<path-to>/cascading-color-systems/css/ccs.css";
<!-- html -->
<link src="<path-to>/cascading-color-systems/css/ccs.css" rel="stylesheet" />
You can copy that file anywhere you want, and it works without dependencies.
If you want to use the Sass features,
you will need Dart-Sass v1.23+
(which may still be in Beta).
This was partially an experiment
in the latest Sass feature: Modules.
Import using the new module import syntax:
@use '<path-to>/cascading-color-systems/' as ccs with (
/* configuration options */
);
Both imports generate core configuration options as CSS custom properties (set by Sass when applicable) eg:
[data-ccs="root"] {
--ccs-prime--config: 330;
--ccs-lightness--config: 50%;
--ccs-saturation--config: 50%;
--ccs-contrast--config: 50%;
--ccs-fade-background--config: 0.9;
}
Add the data-ccs='root'
attribute to your html
element
in order to make your Cascading Colors configuration
available to an entire page.
This attribute will also be used by JavaScript
to apply dynamic user settings globally.
Custom properties only re-calculate
where they are defined --
so we've created a
[data-ccs-colors]
attribute,
which can be applied anywhere
new colors are needed.
We configure the default color
and background-color
settings:
[data-ccs-colors] {
background-color: var(--ccs-background, var(--ccs--bg-full));
color: var(--ccs-color, var(--ccs--fg-full));
}
Along with fallback values for light/dark modes, in case CSS custom properties are not supported:
[data-ccs-colors],
[data-ccs-colors="light"] {
background-color: $fallback-light;
color: $fallback-dark;
}
[data-ccs-colors="invert"],
[data-ccs-colors="dark"] {
background-color: $fallback-dark;
color: $fallback-light;
}
You can override the default colors and backgrounds
by defining --ccs-color
and --ccs-background
:
[data-ccs-colors] {
--ccs-background: var(--ccs-neutral--bg-full);
--ccs-color: var(--ccs-neutral--fg-full);
}
This attribute generates all your colors as custom properties:
--ccs-prime
,--ccs-*
: Colors generated from the given$hues
,$saturation
, and$lightness
-- along with anyneutral
colors, which will use their own customizable (low)$saturation
--ccs-*--fg-full
: All color hues get a full-contrast foreground--ccs-*--bg-full
: All color hues get a full-contrast background--ccs--bg-full
white or black, depending on light/dark mode--ccs--fg-full
white or black, depending on light/dark mode
We also provide the color attributes needed to generate a larger palette:
--ccs-h--*
: the calculated hue for each color, after resolving user-settings, theme-settings, and global configuration--ccs-contrast
: the calculated contrast range based on theme, user, and global settings--ccs-l
,--ccs-l--<fg | bg>-contrast
: the calculated base lightness (user, theme, global) and full-contrast fg/bg values--ccs-s
,--ccs-s--<fg | bg>-contrast
: the calculated base saturation (user, theme, global) and full-contrast fg/bg values--ccs-mode
: the calculated light (1
) or dark (-1
) mode (user, theme, html, or system preference)--ccs-invert
the opposite of CCS-mode
You can pass explicit light/dark mode overrides in html by including a value with the attribute:
<section data-ccs-colors="light">
<!-- light background, dark foreground -->
<div data-ccs-colors="invert">
<!-- invert the colors (can't be nested multiple times) -->
</div>
</section>
<section data-ccs-colors="dark">
<!-- dark background, light foreground -->
</section>
More complex color palettes have to be generated in Sass,
based on the number of $steps
desired
to get from the base colors to their full-contrast versions.
If you import the static CSS file,
we generate a palette based on the default settings,
with 4 steps in either direction.
Each step is named --ccs-<hue>--<direction><step>
,
eg --ccs-prime--fg1
, or --ccs-accent--bg3
.
Themes can be used to pre-set any color values
(especially the accent hue),
and even show/hide user customization controls.
We provide several built-in themes,
and you can add your own
using the [data-ccs-theme]
attribute:
[data-ccs-theme="complement"] {
/* set the accent color 180 degrees off the primary color */
--ccs-accent--theme: calc(var(--ccs-h--prime) + 180);
}
[data-ccs-theme="triad"] {
/* triad logic */
}
In most cases,
you'll want to define the prime
hue,
and possibly a few other options --
and then trigger a build from the module itself.
Here's the code from one of my sites:
@use "../../node_modules/cascading-color-systems/" as ccs with (
$hues: 120, // shorthand for setting the prime hue only
$saturation: 70%,
$contrast: 48%,
$steps: 6,
$fade-background: 15%,
$fades: 0.75,
$build: true,
);
The $build: true
configuration
will generate CSS output based on your settings.
I recommend that for most use-cases,
but you can leave that out
and apply individual mixins:
[data-ccs-colors] {
@include colors;
}
The provided JS
can be hooked up to a form
to accept user-input,
generate custom properties based on their input,
store their preferences in localStorage
,
or revert back to the configured site defaults.
Use the dist.js
UMD module directly in a browser:
<script type="text/javascript" src="dist.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
ccs.default();
</script>
Or import and use index.js
,
if you have a modern build system with ES Module support:
import ccs from "cascading-color-systems";
ccs();
We provide several attributes
that can be used to build
a user-interface for changing colors.
The root
attribute is required:
[data-ccs="root"]
: where user settings should be applied
[data-ccs="menu"]
: You can hide the settings menu and unset buttons by default, and we'll show them when the JS is available[data-ccs-input="unset"]
: A button to unset all user preferences and clear related local storage
Mode can be toggled with a button:
[data-ccs-input="mode"]
: A button to toggle light/dark modes
Or mode can be set explicitly using radio inputs:
[data-ccs-input="light-mode"]
: Set light mode when checked[data-ccs-input="dark-mode"]
: Set dark mode when checked[data-ccs-input="auto-mode"]
: Unset explicit mode when checked, and fallback on browser/operating-system settings
[data-ccs-input~="theme"]
: Allow users to select from availabletheme
options. Addunset-values
to revert all other theme values when changing themes.[data-ccs-input="hue"]
: Allow users to change the primary hue[data-ccs-input="saturation"]
: Allow users to adjust the baseline saturation[data-ccs-input="lightness"]
: Allow users to adjust the baseline lightness[data-ccs-input="contrast"]
: Allow users to adjust the contrast range
Themes can also use [data-ccs-field]
attributes
with the values above
to show and hide inputs/labels based on a given theme.
For example, a high-contrast theme
might not accept user contrast
input:
[data-ccs-theme="contrast"] {
--ccs-contrast: 200%; /* override all other contrast settings */
--ccs-custom-contrast: none; /* hide [data-ccs-field="contrast"] */
}