Once you’ve installed the Moqups extension – and refreshed your Moqups tabs – the eyedropper will be automatically enabled. The eyedropper lets you target any color on the page and apply it instantly to your design elements. Without these restrictions, malicious third party scripts, embedded within pages, could gain unauthorized access to your sensitive information.Ĭreating a Chrome Extension offered us a secure and practical solution – enabling us to capture images of any website, and providing the pixel level access we dearly needed to sample colors. However, one of the disadvantages of SVG/HTML is that the pixel-level access required to sample colors is either blocked, or heavily restricted, by browser makers. This has enabled us to support rich-text content, provide great out-of-the-box typography (especially for non-latin characters), and offer a more realistic preview experience. Like Google Slides and the web-version of Apple’s Keynote, Moqups chose SVG/HTML to display our projects. But, both SVG/HTML and Canvas have their specific limitations. Most software designed to render complex 2D graphics in the browser relies on either SVG/HTML or Canvas to display those graphics. ![]() So, why didn’t we deliver this basic functionality sooner – and why are we relying on a Chrome extension to provide it now? Two words: security and technology. They’re essential for matching colors, especially when you are bringing in outside assets in the form of graphics, images, illustrations, or screenshots. After all, most graphic-design apps include the ability to sample and apply colors. ![]() Install our Chrome Extension The technical adventure behind our color-eyedropperĬolor eyedroppers are everywhere.
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