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Re: Comparing NSColor instances
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Re: Comparing NSColor instances


  • Subject: Re: Comparing NSColor instances
  • From: Dave Camp <email@hidden>
  • Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2007 07:51:09 -0800

On Nov 4, 2007, at 6:58 PM, Ricky Sharp wrote:

On Nov 4, 2007, at 8:29 PM, Ricky Sharp wrote:

I have the need to compare multiple NSColor instances to see if they all represent the same color. This is so I can correctly support multiple selection in a new IB 3.0 plugin.

My first approach was to "normalize" all colors like so:

NSColor* normalizedColor = [aColor colorUsingColorSpace: [NSColorSpace genericRGBColorSpace]];

Then, extract the RGB components with getRed:green:blue:alpha: so I could do a simple comparison of them.

But, when calling getRed::::, I get the following in the Console:

*** -getRed:green:blue:alpha: not defined for the NSColor NSCustomColorSpace Generic RGB colorspace 0 0 0 1; need to first convert colorspace.

Also tried deviceRGBColorSpace, but got the same results.

My assumption above was that since I was using an 'RGB' color space, that one could then call getRed:green:blue:alpha:.


I do have a working solution to where I still normalize to the same color space, but then use numberOfComponents followed by a getComponents: with a CGFloat array. I then compare the values in the array.

I should beef up the code though to handle the case where calling numberOfComponents can raise an exception (if no floating point components exist for the color).

Also, I'm never keen on doing exact compares on floating point values, so I may add in a bit of "slop" to the compare. On the other hand, if I do normalize two colors to the same color space, it should be reasonable to assume it will have identical valued components.

If accuracy is important (might not be depending on your application), you should convert to a larger color space for your comparisons, maybe Lab or Xyz. I don't think Generic RGB is terribly large.


Also, someone on the Quartz or ColorSync lists might be able to suggest a good solution to your problem.

Dave
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References: 
 >Comparing NSColor instances (From: Ricky Sharp <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Comparing NSColor instances (From: Ricky Sharp <email@hidden>)

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