I wrote recently about moving away from Sass to using native CSS features. I had this to say on the topic of mixins in Sass:
These can be very useful, but now there’s a lot that you can do just in CSS with
calc()
. The built-indarken()
andlighten()
mixins are handy though when it comes to colours.
I know we will be getting these in the future but we’re not there yet with CSS.
Anyway, I had all this in the back of my mind when I was reading Lea’s excellent feature in this month’s Increment: A user’s guide to CSS variables. She’s written about a really clever technique of combining custom properites with hsl()
colour values for creating colour palettes. (See also: Una’s post on dynamic colour theming with pure CSS.)
As so often happens when I’m reading something written by Lea—or seeing her give a talk—light bulbs started popping over my head (my usual response to Lea’s knowledge bombs is either “I didn’t know you could do that!” or “I never thought of doing that!”).
I immediately set about implementing this technique over on The Session. The trick here is to use separate custom properties for the hue, saturation, and lightness parts of hsl()
colour values. Then, when you want to lighten or darken the colour—say, on hover—you can update the lightness part.
I’ve made a Codepen to show what I’m doing.
Let’s say I’m styling a button
element. I make custom propertes for hsl()
values:
button {
--button-colour-hue: 19;
--button-colour-saturation: 82%;
--button-colour-lightness: 38%;
background-color: hsl(
var(--button-colour-hue),
var(--button-colour-saturation),
var(--button-colour-lightness)
);
}
For my buttons, I want the borders to be slightly darker than the background colour. When I was using Sass, I used the darken()
function to this. Now I use calc()
. Here’s how I make the borders 10% darker:
border-color: hsl(
var(--button-colour-hue),
var(--button-colour-saturation),
calc(var(--button-colour-lightness) - 10%)
);
That calc()
function is substracting a percentage from a percentage: 38% minus 10% in this case. The borders will have a lightness of 28%.
I make the bottom border even darker and the top border lighter to give a feeling of depth.
On The Session there’s a “cancel” button style that’s deep red.
Here’s how I set its colour:
.cancel {
--button-colour-hue: 0;
--button-colour-saturation: 100%;
--button-colour-lightness: 40%;
}
That’s it. The existing button declarations take care of assigning the right shades for the border colours.
Here’s another example. Site admins see buttons for some actions only available to them. I want those buttons to have their own colour:
.admin {
--button-colour-hue: 45;
--button-colour-saturation: 100%;
--button-colour-lightness: 40%;
}
You get the idea. It doesn’t matter how many differently-coloured buttons I create, the effect of darkening or lightening their borders is all taken care of.
So it turns out that the lighten()
and darken()
functions from Sass are available to us in CSS by using a combination of custom properties, hsl()
, and calc()
.
I’m also using this combination to lighten or darken background and border colours on :hover
. You can poke around the Codepen if you want to see that in action.
I love seeing the combinatorial power of these different bits of CSS coming together. It really is a remarkably powerful programming language.
Top comments (1)
On your blog and here on DEV I always find time to read your journal. Awesome work.
On a side note, you can add the language to your code blocks to render them with syntax highlighting. Currently, they are rendered as plaintext.
When you add a language after the three back ticks e.g
css
orjavascript
it will be rendered similar to the code block below: