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Home/ Questions/Q 1016381
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T10:32:27+00:00 2026-05-16T10:32:27+00:00

Imagine we how some basic colors: RED = Color ((196, 2, 51), RED) ORANGE

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Imagine we how some basic colors:

RED = Color ((196, 2, 51), "RED")
ORANGE = Color ((255, 165, 0), "ORANGE")
YELLOW = Color ((255, 205, 0), "YELLOW")
GREEN = Color ((0, 128, 0), "GREEN")
BLUE = Color ((0, 0, 255), "BLUE")
VIOLET = Color ((127, 0, 255), "VIOLET")
BLACK = Color ((0, 0, 0), "BLACK")
WHITE = Color ((255, 255, 255), "WHITE")

I want to have a function, which gets a 3-tuple as a parameter (like (206, 17, 38)), and it should return the color which it is. For instance, (206, 17, 38) is red, and (2, 2, 0) is black, and (0, 255, 0) is green.
Which is most accurate way to choose one of 8 colors?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T10:32:28+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 10:32 am

    Short answer: use the Euclidean distance in a device independent color space (source: Color difference article in Wikipedia). Since RGB is device-dependent, you should first map your colors to one of the device-independent color spaces.

    I suggest to convert RGB to Lab*. To quote Wikipedia again:

    Unlike the RGB and CMYK color models,
    Lab color is designed to approximate
    human vision.

    Here’s a recipe to do the conversion. Once you have the L, a, b values, calculate the Euclidean distance between your color and all the reference colors and choose the closest one.


    Actually, the python-colormath Python module on Google Code (under GPL v3) is capable of converting between many different color spaces and calculates color differences as well.

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