The top row consists of the colors generated by the original library, the bottom row is generated by this JavaScript version.
var header = $('.header');
var avatar = header.find('img.avatar');
Palette
.generate(avatar)
.done(function(palette) {
var vibrantColor = palette.getVibrantColor();
if(vibrantColor !== null) {
header.css('color', vibrantColor.toString());
}
}, function(error) {
console.error(error);
}
});
There are (about) three reasons this library doesn't completely match the Java version
- Images are scaled differently and colors might appear in different quantities
- The RGB to HSL conversion is different, and the code might behave differently in edge cases (i.e. a float on Android might be just above 1.0, while in JS it's cut off at 1)
- The PriorityQueues on both platforms behave differently. I translated most of the Java code, yet objects still don't get sorted the same 100% of the time. Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.
- Chris Banes, author of the original Java-based library