A simple utility package for working with WCAG 2.2/3.0 color contrasts
- a11y: Built for checking how readable colors are together
- Simple: Parsing of hex strings, contrast checks
- WCAG: Support for checking both WCAG 2.0 and WCAG 3.0 contrasts
- APCA: Support for the upcoming APCA contrast algorithm
Table of Contents
import { apcaContrastValue, hex, wcagContrastValue } from "@sondr3/a11y-color-contrast";
const wcag = wcagContrastValue(hex("#e1e1e1"), hex("#fff"));
const apca = apcaContrastValue(hex("#e1e1e1"), hex("#fff"));
Install the module with your favorite manager: pnpm add a11y-color-contrast
import { apcaContrastValue, hex, wcagContrastValue } from "a11y-color-contrast";
const wcag = wcagContrastValue(hex("#e1e1e1"), hex("#fff"));
const apca = apcaContrastValue(hex("#e1e1e1"), hex("#fff"));
See more details and documentations at JSR.
hex
is a utility function to parse a hex string to a [number, number, number]
, useful if your colors are not in the
RBG
format. Supports both short and long hex colors, and will strip out the alpha channel when the hex string contains
it. Note, the returned tripled will contain NaN
if the string cannot be parsed. Use isValidColor
to check if the input can be invalid.
import { hex } from "a11y-color-contrast";
hex("#fff");
hex("#e1e1e1");
// Also support hex4/hex8
hex("#1234");
hex("#11ff0000");
// And missing #
hex("fff");
Based on the WCAG 2.2 algorithm to calculate how readable two colors are when used together. The first argument is the foreground color and the second the background. By default, the function defaults to checking whether the colors pass the WCAG AAA standard (7:1 contrast ratio) for normal text.
import { hex, wcag } from "a11y-color-contrast";
wcag(hex("#fff"), hex("#e1e1e1"));
// { level: "AAA", size: "normal", score: 1.3076906134240802, pass: false }
wcag(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#fff"));
// { level: "AAA", size: "normal", score: 19.168645448127652, pass: true }
wcag(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#f4f"), { level: "AA" });
// { level: "AA", size: "normal", score: 6.8668010864317885, pass: true }
wcag(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#f4f"), { level: "AA", size: "large" });
// { level: "AA", size: "large", score: 6.8668010864317885, pass: true }
A simpler version of the wcag
function, this returns the contrast value between two colors based on the WCAG
2.2 algorithm.
import { hex, wcagContrastValue } from "a11y-color-contrast";
wcagContrastValue(hex("#fff"), hex("#e1e1e1"));
// 1.3076906134240802
wcagContrastValue(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#fff"));
// 19.168645448127652
A simpler version of the wcag
function, this checks whether two colors used together are readable based on
the WCAG parameters passed.
import { hex, wcagIsReadable } from "a11y-color-contrast";
wcagIsReadable(hex("#fff"), hex("#e1e1e1"));
// false
wcagIsReadable(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#fff"));
// true
wcagIsReadable(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#f4f"), { level: "AAA" });
// false
wcagIsReadable(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#f4f"), { level: "AA" });
// true
Based on the upcoming WCAG 3.0 standard, this function is based on the APCA algorithm to calculate how readable two colors are when used together. The first argument is the foreground color and the second the background. It is highly recommended reading the linked article and resources to get an overview over the differences between the WCAG and APCA standard.
import { apcaContrastValue, hex } from "a11y-color-contrast";
apcaContrastValue(hex("#fff"), hex("#e1e1e1"));
// -17.5
apcaContrastValue(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#fff"));
// 105.5
apcaContrastValue(hex("#0f0f0f"), hex("#f4f"));
// 51.2
Based on a Lc between two colors, this will find the appropriate font sizes for it. The returned array will show
"placeholder"
for when the contrast is too low for text and "prohibited"
when the contrast is unusable and otherwise
a font size. If no font size can be calculated it will return null.
The returned array contains nine values, corresponding to the font useable at font weight 100 at index 0, and so on until weight 900 at index 8.
import { apcaToInterpolatedFont, hex } from "a11y-color-contrast";
apcaToInterpolatedFont(-17.5);
// 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
// [ "placeholder", ...]
apcaToInterpolatedFont(105.5);
// 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
// [ 39, 25, 18, 14.5, 14, 13, 12, 16, 18 ]
apcaToInterpolatedFont(51.2);
// 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900
// [ 92, 69, 57, 31, 27, 23.5, 20.5, 20.5, 20.5 ]
Based on a Lc value, this function allows you to check whether a given font and weight combination passes the required minimum contrast based on the APCA contrast table.
The first parameter is the Lc value, the second is either a single font size or an array of them and the third, optional parameter is either a single font weight or an array of them. If the weight parameter is undefined, it will default to all the font weights.
import { apcaValidateFont, hex } from "a11y-color-contrast";
apcaValidateFont(-17.5, 36, 800);
// { "36": { "800": false } }
apcaValidateFont(105.5, [14, 16, 18], [400, 600, 800]);
// {
// "14": { "400": true, "600": true, "800": false },
// "16": { "400": true, "600": true, "800": true },
// "18": { "400": true, "600": true, "800": true }
// }
apcaValidateFont(51.2, [18, 32]);
// {
// "18": { "100": false, "200": false, ..., "700": false, "800": false, "900": false },
// "32": { "100": false, "200": false, ..., "500": true, "600": true, "700": true, "800": true, "900": true }
// }
Converts an RGB triplet to its hex string representation.
import { toHex } from "a11y-color-contrast";
toHex([0, 0, 0]);
// "#000000"
Checks whether a color parsed via hex
is valid.
import { isValidColor } from "a11y-color-contrast";
isValidColor([0, 0, 0]);
// true
isValidColor([NaN, 0, 0]);
// false
Converts an RGB object into an RGB triplet.
import { colorFromObject } from "a11y-color-contrast";
colorFromObject({ r: 0, g: 0, b: 0 });
// [0, 0, 0]
- APCA homepage: https://git.apcacontrast.com/
- APCA calculator: https://www.myndex.com/APCA/
- APCA/WCAG calculator: https://www.myndex.com/BPCA/
- Contrast Calculator: https://contrast.tools/
- Accessible Palette: https://accessiblepalette.com/
- It’s time for a more sophisticated color contrast check for data visualizations: https://blog.datawrapper.de/color-contrast-check-data-vis-wcag-apca/
MIT