css types <hue>

The <hue> CSS data type represents the hue angle of a color. It is used in the color functions that accept hue expressed as a single value, specifically hsl(), hwb(), lch(), and oklch() functional notations.

An sRGB color wheel

The color wheel above shows hues at all angles in the sRGB color space. In particular, red is at 0deg, yellow is at 60deg, lime is at 120deg, cyan is at 180deg, blue is at 240deg, and magenta is at 300deg.

Note: The angles corresponding to particular hues depend on the color space. For example, the hue angle of sRGB green is 120deg in the sRGB color space, but 134.39deg in the CIELAB color space.

The following table lists typical colors at various angles in the sRGB (used by hsl() and hwb()), CIELAB (used by lch()), and Oklab (used by oklch()) color spaces:

60° 120° 180° 240° 300°
sRGB
CIELAB
Oklab

Syntax

A <hue> can be either an <angle> or a <number>.

Values

<angle>

An angle expressed in degrees, gradians, radians, or turns using the deg, grad, rad, or turn, respectively.

<number>

A real number, representing degrees of the hue angle.

As an <angle> is periodic, <hue> is normalized to the range [0deg, 360deg]. It implicitly wraps around such that 480deg is the same as 120deg, -120deg is the same as 240deg, -1turn is the same as 1turn, and so on.

Interpolation

<hue> values are interpolated as <angle> values, and the default interpolation algorithm is shorter. In some color-related CSS functions, this can be overridden by the <hue-interpolation-method> component.

Examples

Changing the hue of a color using a slider

The following example shows the effect of changing the hue value of the hsl() functional notation on a color.

HTML

<input type="range" min="0" max="360" value="0" id="hue-slider" />
<p>Hue: <span id="hue-value">0deg</span></p>
<div id="box"></div>

CSS

#box {
  background-color: hsl(0 100% 50%);
}

JavaScript

const hue = document.querySelector("#hue-slider");
const box = document.querySelector("#box");
hue.addEventListener("input", () => {
  box.style.backgroundColor = `hsl(${hue.value} 100% 50%)`;
  document.querySelector("#hue-value").textContent = `${hue.value}deg`;
});

Approximating red hues in different color spaces

The following example shows a similar red color in different color spaces. The values in the lch() and oklch() functions are rounded for readability.

HTML

<div data-color="hsl-red">hsl()</div>
<div data-color="hwb-red">hwb()</div>
<div data-color="lch-red">lch()</div>
<div data-color="oklch-red">oklch()</div>

CSS

[data-color="hsl-red"] {
  /* hsl(<hue> <saturation> <lightness>) */
  background-color: hsl(0 100% 50%);
}
[data-color="hwb-red"] {
  /* hwb(<hue> <whiteness> <blackness>) */
  background-color: hwb(0 0% 0%);
}
[data-color="lch-red"] {
  /* lch(<lightness> <chroma> <hue>) */
  background-color: lch(50 150 40);
}
[data-color="oklch-red"] {
  /* oklch(<lightness> <chroma> <hue>) */
  background-color: oklch(0.6 0.4 20);
}

See also