Author: Matthew Leonawicz ORCID logo
License: MIT

Project Status: Active – The project has reached a stable, usable state and is being actively developed. Travis build status AppVeyor build status Codecov test coverage

CRAN status CRAN downloads Github Stars

Donate

legocolors provides a dataset containing several Lego color naming conventions established by various popular sources. It also provides functions for mapping between these color naming conventions as well as between Lego color names, hex colors, and R color names.

By default, nearest colors are computed based on distance in RGB space when an exact match is not found. This behavior supports the purpose of exchanging arbitrary colors for known Lego colors when the goal is to actually acquire and build something out of Lego parts. This focus is also one of the reasons legocolors uses BrickLink color names as the default naming convention. See ?legocolor for details.

Installation

Install the CRAN release of legocolors with

install.packages("legocolors")

Install the development version from GitHub with

# install.packages("remotes")
remotes::install_github("leonawicz/legocolors")

Palette conversions

The key helper functions are hex_to_legocolor and legocolor_to_hex. hex_to_color is also provided for general convenience.

library(legocolors)
hex_to_color(c("#ff0000", "#ff0001"))
#> [1] "red"  "~red"
hex_to_legocolor("#ff0000")
#> [1] "~Trans-Red"
hex_to_legocolor("#ff0000", material = "solid")
#> [1] "~Red"
legocolor_to_hex("Red")
#> [1] "#B40000"
hex_to_color(legocolor_to_hex("Red"))
#> [1] "~red3"

x <- topo.colors(10)
hex_to_legocolor(x)
#>  [1] "~Dark Purple"              "~Blue"                     "~Trans-Dark Blue"          "~Medium Azure"             "~Bright Green"             "~Lime"                    
#>  [7] "~Glitter Trans-Neon Green" "~Trans-Yellow"             "~Trans-Neon Green"         "~Light Nougat"
hex_to_legocolor(x, material = "solid")
#>  [1] "~Dark Purple"         "~Blue"                "~Dark Azure"          "~Medium Azure"        "~Bright Green"        "~Lime"                "~Yellow"             
#>  [8] "~Yellow"              "~Bright Light Yellow" "~Light Nougat"
hex_to_legocolor(x, def = "tlg", material = "solid")
#>  [1] "~Medium Lilac"           "~Bright Blue"            "~Dark Azur"              "~Medium Azur"            "~Bright Green"           "~Bright Yellowish Green"
#>  [7] "~Bright Yellow"          "~Bright Yellow"          "~Cool Yellow"            "~Light Nougat"

While different sets of Lego colors are organized by material type, e.g., solid colors, semi-transparent colors, etc., these palettes are not useful for plotting data. The greatest value comes from converting useful color palettes to those comprised of existing Lego colors while still keeping as close to the original palette as possible.

Palette preview

The view_legopal function can be used to quickly see a Lego color palette. It can plot a named material palette, but like the functions above, it can also display a converted palette if given an arbitrary vector of hex color values.

view_legopal("solid")


r <- rainbow(9)
r
#> [1] "#FF0000" "#FFAA00" "#AAFF00" "#00FF00" "#00FFAA" "#00AAFF" "#0000FF" "#AA00FF" "#FF00AA"

view_legopal(r, material = "solid", show_labels = TRUE, label_size = 0.7)

Citation

Matthew Leonawicz (2021). legocolors: Official Lego Color Palettes. R package version 0.3.2. https://github.com/leonawicz/legocolors

Contribute

Contributions are welcome. Contribute through GitHub via pull request. Please create an issue first if it is regarding any substantive feature add or change.


Please note that the legocolors project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.