Node.js library for comparing PNG-images, taking into account human color
perception. It is created specially for the needs of visual regression testing
for gemini utility, but can be used
for other purposes.
var looksSame = require('looks-same');
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', function(error, equal) {
//equal will be true, if images looks the same
});Parameters can be paths to files or buffer with compressed png image.
By default, it will detect only noticeable differences. If you wish to detect any difference,
use strict options:
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {strict: true}, function(error, equal) {
...
});You can also adjust the ΔE value that will be treated as error in non-strict mode:
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {tolerance: 5}, function(error, equal) {
...
});Default tolerance in non-strict mode is 2.3 which is enough for the most cases.
Setting tolerance to 0 will produce the same result as strict: true, but strict mode
is faster.
Attempt to set tolerance in strict mode will produce an error.
Some devices can have different proportion between physical and logical screen resolutions also
known as pixel ratio. Default value for this proportion is 1.
This param also affects the comparison result, so it can be set manually with pixelRatio option.
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {pixelRatio: 2}, function(error, equal) {
...
});For visual regression tasks it may be useful to ignore text caret in text input elements.
You can do it with ignoreCaret option.
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {ignoreCaret: true}, function(error, equal) {
...
});Both strict and ignoreCaret can be set independently of one another.
Some images has difference while comparing because of antialiasing. These diffs will be ignored by default. You can use ignoreAntialiasing option with false value to disable ignoring such diffs. In that way antialiased pixels will be marked as diffs. Read more about anti-aliasing algorithm.
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {ignoreAntialiasing: true}, function(error, equal) {
...
});Sometimes the antialiasing algorithm can work incorrectly due to some features of the browser rendering engine. Use the option antialiasingTolerance to make the algorithm less strict. With this option you can specify the minimum difference in brightness (zero by default) between the darkest/lightest pixel (which is adjacent to the antialiasing pixel) and theirs adjacent pixels.
We recommend that you don't increase this value above 10. If you need to increase more than 10 then this is definitely not antialiasing.
Example:
looksSame('image1.png', 'image2.png', {ignoreAntialiasing: true, antialiasingTolerance: 3}, function(error, equal) {
...
});looksSame.createDiff({
reference: '/path/to/reference/image.png',
current: '/path/to/current/image.png',
diff: '/path/to/save/diff/to.png',
highlightColor: '#ff00ff', //color to highlight the differences
strict: false,//strict comparsion
tolerance: 2.5
}, function(error) {
});If you don't want the diff image to be written on disk, then simply don't
pass any diff: path to the createDiff method. The callback will then
receive a Buffer containing the diff as the 2nd argument.
looksSame.createDiff({
//exactly same options as above, but without diff
}, function(error, buffer) {
...
});If you just need to compare two colors you can use colors function:
looksSame.colors(
{R: 255, G: 0, B: 0},
{R: 254, G: 1, B: 1},
{tolerance: 2.5}
);