webcolor-labels
Zero-dependency, plug-and-play library that enables #hex-color syntax for your own types!

Motivation
Unrestricted OverloadedLabels syntax was implemented in GHC 9.6.1. It isn't hard to notice
that this syntax is a strict superset of hexadecimal CSS color syntax, a.k.a. Web colors. It would be great if GUI libraries could take advantage of this
fact and allow their users to write #f00 for the color "red," or even #red, right?
That's where webcolor-labels comes into play. This library implements type-level string parsing and validation
and provides you an easy-to-use interface for defining an IsLabel instance. In fact, it's as easy as counting
one, two, three:
-- one
import WebColor.Labels
import GHC.OverloadedLabels
-- two
instance IsWebColorAlpha s => IsLabel s YourColor where
  fromLabel = webColorAlpha @s yourColorFromWord8
-- three
yourColorFromWord8 :: Word8 -> Word8 -> Word8 -> Word8 -> YourColor
yourColorFromWord8 red green blue alpha = ...
And that's all!
Syntax
Allowed colors aim to follow the Wikipedia Web Colors page; here is a quick recap:
A color is written as a hex triplet, which is a six-digit (e.g., #fa12c7) or eight-digit (e.g., #fa12c7aa) hexadecimal number. The bytes represent the red, green, blue, and optional alpha channels of the color; hence we have #rrggbbaa.
It is possible to use the shorthand form with three and four digits: #f8c = #ff88cc and #f8c3 = #ff88cc33.
The syntax also supports 16 basic colors for convenience:
| Color name | 
Hex value | 
| #white | 
#FFFFFF | 
| #silver | 
#C0C0C0 | 
| #gray | 
#808080 | 
| #black | 
#000000 | 
| #red | 
#FF0000 | 
| #maroon | 
#800000 | 
| #yellow | 
#FFFF00 | 
| #olive | 
#808000 | 
| #lime | 
#00FF00 | 
| #green | 
#008000 | 
| #aqua | 
#00FFFF | 
| #teal | 
#008080 | 
| #blue | 
#0000FF | 
| #navy | 
#000080 | 
| #fuchsia | 
#FF00FF | 
| #purple | 
#800080 | 
Hex triplet form is case-insensitive; therefore, #fff is the same as #FFF, but basic colors are case-sensitive.
That means #red is the same as #f00, but #RED and #Red result in a compile-time error.
FAQ
I want to use this syntax with $LIBRARYNAME, what should I do?
webcolor-label's primary users are other library authors; therefore, you should go to the $LIBRARYNAME's issue tracker and tell them that webcolor-labels will improve the lives of their users.
Alternatively, you may write an orphan instance, but it's a bad idea in general and you should avoid that as much as possible.
generic-lens uses the same syntax. Does that mean it will conflict with an instance defined using webcolor-labels?
No, unless you define a highly polymorphic IsLabel instance or your color is a type alias for a function.
The generic-lens instance applies only if a function is expected in place of #label. Therefore, define instances with a concrete head, and everything will work smoothly.
But what about instances for the color types from different libraries? Might they conflict?
No, if each instance is defined correctly.
I have a type class to represent colors. How can I use # syntax with a function that accepts my type class?
Unfortunately, my library just doesn't fit this use case. It's the same problem as show . read; GHC just can't infer a type in the middle.
I want to use different/custom values for named colors, but webcolor-labels provides pre-installed values. What should I do in that case?
You can still use type-level parsing from webcolor-labels and build custom routing on top of that, but you have to lower that into values yourself.
If you have any questions, you can email me using me@sandwitch.dev. Alternatively, you can DM me on Matrix (@root:sandwitch.dev) or Telegram (@sand_witch).
Many thanks to the Russian Haskell gamedev community, who encouraged me to convert this code into a real library and assisted with shaping the API.