tractorcow/silverstripe-colorpicker

There is no license information available for the latest version (4.2.0) of this package.

Color picker field for Silverstripe CMS using the ColorPicker jQuery plugin

Installs: 199 221

Dependents: 18

Suggesters: 2

Security: 0

Stars: 18

Watchers: 4

Forks: 23

Open Issues: 5

Language:JavaScript

Type:silverstripe-vendormodule

4.2.0 2023-05-14 23:22 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-11-15 02:39:17 UTC


README

The ColorPicker Module adds a color-picker input field to the SilverStripe CMS. It makes use of the ColorPicker jQuery Plugin.

Requirements

SilverStripe Framework v4+ and v5+

For a Version that is compatible to SilverStripe 3+, consider using the 3.0 release

Installation

Install using composer

composer require tractorcow/silverstripe-colorpicker ^4@dev

Usage

Here's how you define a DB field to be a color:

private static $db = [
    'BgColor' => 'Color'
];

Alternatively, you can also use the fully qualified classname. The best way to do this is to import the class at the top of your PHP file, like so:

use TractorCow\Colorpicker\Color;
use TractorCow\Colorpicker\Forms\ColorField;

In your class, you can then use:

private static $db = [
    'BgColor' => Color::class
];

That's all... scaffolding will take care of creating the appropriate form-field.

If you use getCMSFields to create your fields yourself, you might want to do something like this:

public function getCMSFields()
{
    $fields = parent::getCMSFields();

    $fields->addFieldToTab(
    	'Root.Main',
    	ColorField::create('BgColor', 'Background color')
    );

    return $fields;
}

Tips for using the Color fieldtype in templates

The TractorCow\Colorpicker\Color fieldtype provides some helper methods that can be useful in templating. Let's consider the above scenario where you have a Field named 'BgColor'. The most common use-case is something like this:

<body style="background-color: #$BgColor;">
...

But there's more. You could also use CSS3 rgba color definitions with alpha. Example:

<body style="background-color: #$BgColor; background-color: $BgColor.CSSColor(0.5);">
...

This will color your background with an alpha value of 0.5 (browsers that don't support rgba, such as IE-8 will fall back to the first background-color definition, that's why it's still in there).

Here's a complete list of the Color methods available in templates:

  • Red returns the red color component
  • Green returns the green color component
  • Blue returns the blue color component
  • CSSColor returns the color as rgba. The alpha value can be specified with the (optional) argument.
  • Luminance the luminance of the color as a floating-point value ranging from 0-1
  • Blend blends the color with a second background color (defaults to #FFFFFF) with the given opacity. $BGColor.Blend(0.5, '#000000') will give the color 50% opacity and put it on top of a black background.
  • AlteredColorHSV modifies the current color by the given HSV values. These values are offsets, so you could do something like this: $BgColor.AlteredColorHSV(0.5, 0, 0) which will return the color with the opposite hue. All parameters are percentage based and range from 0 - 1. So doing: $BgColor.AlteredColorHSV(0, 0, -0.2) will result in a color with 20% less brightness (absolute, not relative).
  • ColorCMS returns HTML code with a visual representation and the HEX code of the color for usage in CMS. Can be used in $summary_fields of a DataObject: $summary_fields = [ 'Color.ColorCMS' => 'Color' ]; so that GridFields will always render the visible color instead of only the HEX code.