Picking colors of any pixel on the screen with the EyeDropper API

The EyeDropper API enables authors to use a browser-supplied eyedropper in the construction of custom color pickers.

What is the EyeDropper API?

Many creative applications allow users to pick colors from parts of the app window or even from the entire screen, typically using an eyedropper metaphor.

Photoshop, for example, lets users sample colors from the canvas so they don't have to guess a color and risk getting it wrong. PowerPoint also has an eyedropper tool, useful when setting the outline or fill color of a shape. Even Chromium DevTools has an eyedropper you can use when editing colors in the CSS styles panel so you don't have to remember or copy the color code from somewhere else.

If you're building a creative application with web technologies, you might want to provide a similar feature to your users. However, doing this on the web is hard, if possible at all, especially if you want to sample colors from the entire device's screen (for example, from a different application) and not just from the current browser tab. There isn't a browser-supplied eyedropper tool that web apps can use for their own needs.

The <input type="color"> element comes close. On Chromium-based browsers running on desktop devices, it provides a helpful eyedropper in the color picker drop down. However, using this means your app would have to customize it with CSS, and wrap it in a bit of JavaScript to make it available to other parts of your app. Going with this option also means other browsers would not have access to the feature.

The EyeDropper API fills this gap by providing a way to sample colors from the screen.

Chromium color picker.

How to use the EyeDropper API

Browser support

Browser Support

  • 95
  • 95
  • x
  • x

Source

Feature detection and browser support

First, make sure the API is available before using it.

if ('EyeDropper' in window) {
  // The API is available!
}

The EyeDropper API is supported on Chromium-based browsers like Edge or Chrome as of version 95.

Using the API

To use the API, create an EyeDropper object and then call its open() method.

const eyeDropper = new EyeDropper();

The open() method returns a promise that resolves after the user selects a pixel on the screen, and the resolved value provides access to the pixel's color in sRGBHex format (#RRGGBB). The promise is rejected if the user leaves the eyedropper mode by pressing the esc key.

try {
  const result = await eyeDropper.open();
  // The user selected a pixel, here is its color:
  const colorHexValue = result.sRGBHex;
} catch (err) {
  // The user escaped the eyedropper mode.
}

The app's code can also cancel the eyedropper mode. This can come in handy if the app's state changes in a substantial way. Maybe a popup dialog appears and requires the input of the user. The eyedropper mode should be stopped at that point.

To cancel the eyedropper, you can use an AbortController object's signal and pass it to the open() method.

const abortController = new AbortController();

try {
  const result = await eyeDropper.open({signal: abortController.signal});
  // ...
} catch (err) {
  // ...
}

// And then later, when the eyedropper mode needs to be stopped:
abortController.abort();

Putting it all together, below you can find a reusable async function:

async function sampleColorFromScreen(abortController) {
  const eyeDropper = new EyeDropper();
  try {
    const result = await eyeDropper.open({signal: abortController.signal});
    return result.sRGBHex;
  } catch (e) {
    return null;
  }
}

Try it!

Using Microsoft Edge or Google Chrome 95 or later, on Windows or Mac, open one of the EyeDropper demos.

Try the color game demo for instance. Hit the Play button and in a limited amount of time, attempt to sample a color from the list at the bottom that matches the colored square at the top.

Color game demo.

Privacy and security considerations

Behind this seemingly simple web API hides a potentially harmful privacy and security concern. What if a malicious website could start seeing pixels from your screen?

To address this concern, the API specification requires the following measures:

  • First, the API doesn't actually let the eyedropper mode start without user intent. The open() method can only be called in response to a user action (like a button click).
  • Second, no pixel information can be retrieved without user intent again. The promise returned by open() only resolves to a color value in response to a user action (clicking on a pixel). So the eyedropper cannot be used in the background without the user noticing it.
  • To help users notice the eyedropper mode easily, browsers are required to make the mode obvious. This is why the normal mouse cursor disappears after a short delay and the dedicated user interface appears instead. There's also a delay between when the eyedropper mode starts and when the user can select a pixel to ensure the user has had time to see the magnifying glass.
  • Finally, users are able to cancel the eyedropper mode at any time (by pressing the esc key).

Feedback

The Chromium team wants to hear about your experiences with the EyeDropper API.

Tell us about the API design

Is there something about the API that doesn't work like you expected? Or are there missing methods or properties that you need to implement your idea? Have a question or comment on the security model? File a spec issue on the API's GitHub repo, or add your thoughts to an existing issue.

Report a problem with the implementation

Did you find a bug with Chromium's implementation? Or is the implementation different from the spec? File a bug at new.crbug.com. Be sure to include as much detail as you can, simple instructions for reproducing, and enter Blink>Forms>Color in the Components box. Glitch works great for sharing quick and easy repros.

Show support for the API

Are you planning to use the EyeDropper API? Your public support helps the Chromium team prioritize features and shows other browser vendors how critical it is to support them. Send a tweet to @ChromiumDev using the hashtag #EyeDropper and let us know where and how you're using it.

Helpful links

Acknowledgements

The EyeDropper API was specified and implemented by Ionel Popescu from the Microsoft Edge team. This post was reviewed by Joe Medley.