Solution
Here's some vanilla js that will get the effective background color for a given element:
function getInheritedBackgroundColor(el) {
// get default style for current browser
var defaultStyle = getDefaultBackground() // typically "rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)"
// get computed color for el
var backgroundColor = window.getComputedStyle(el).backgroundColor
// if we got a real value, return it
if (backgroundColor != defaultStyle) return backgroundColor
// if we've reached the top parent el without getting an explicit color, return default
if (!el.parentElement) return defaultStyle
// otherwise, recurse and try again on parent element
return getInheritedBackgroundColor(el.parentElement)
}
function getDefaultBackground() {
// have to add to the document in order to use getComputedStyle
var div = document.createElement("div")
document.head.appendChild(div)
var bg = window.getComputedStyle(div).backgroundColor
document.head.removeChild(div)
return bg
}
Then you can call it like this:
var myEl = document.getElementById("a")
var bgColor = getInheritedBackgroundColor(myEl)
Demo in jsFiddle
Explanation
The solution works by checking the resolved value for a particular element. If the background is transparent, it'll start over again with the element's parent until it finds a defined color or reaches the top.
There are two main concepts to be familiar with:
- How background-color is set?
- How resolved values work?
According to MDN, background-color
has an initial value of transparent
and is not an inherited property. Meaning even if a parent div has a color applied, any unstyled child div will have a background-color
of transparent
. Most browsers, will convert this to an rgb color space so will return the value of rgba(0,0,0,0)
with the alpha channel / transparency set to 0%
.
This distinction may seem trivial, but it's important to understand that most divs on a page are probably transparent. They do not paint any colors, they just don't mask parent elements. If background values were inherited, colors with transparency would stack and get stronger on child elements
According to MDN, resolved values are what is returned by the browser from .getComputedStyle()
which includes computed values and used values. Using the resolved value helps handle special values like inherit
, initial
, etc. and coverts any relative values to absolute values. Plus also provides a consistent API for getting styling info from attributes vs those applied via stylesheets.
So window.getComputedStyle()
isn't used to determine the color that appears in the background; it's just there to get the actual value for the div. And then we'll traverse up the DOM tree until we find an actual value.
Further Reading
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