Reverse-Engineering the iPhone X Home Indicator Color Nathan Gitter Blocked Unblock Follow Following Dec 29, 2017 I noticed an unusual behavior of the iPhone X home indicator while working on my most recent app. The app’s background near the home indicator is purple. When the app launches, the home indicator is very light gray. But something odd happened when I pressed the app’s “share” button, which opened a default iOS activity view (aka “share sheet”). When I hit the “cancel” button to close the activity view, the home indicator animated to a dark gray color. Home indicator starts light, then a share sheet passing makes it dark. Even though the background color was exactly the same, the light-colored activity view passing underneath caused the home indicator to change color. The only way to get the home indicator back to its original color was to leave the app and come back. I had never seen this before, and it prompted my curiosity. What determines the color of the home indicator and why it does it behave like this? The answer is surprisingly complex. Let’s take a deep dive and see what we can learn!

Home Indicator Basics In September 2017, Apple introduced its newest iteration of mobile phone: iPhone X. The new design replaced the iconic home button with on-screen gestures. To go home, the user simply swipes up from the bottom of the screen. https://www.apple.com/iphone-x/ The Home Indicator’s Purpose To create the affordance of being able to swipe up from the bottom of the screen, Apple added a small horizontal bar known as the home indicator. The home indicator is always present except for the home screen and in any apps that request it to be temporarily hidden (full-screen video, games, etc.). The home indicator serves another purpose: protecting the bottom edge of the screen from conflicting user interface elements and gestures. Because the user needs to be able to swipe up from the bottom of the screen at any time, best practices now dictate that developers should avoid place conflicting gestures or buttons in the bottom edge of the display. By placing a bar at the bottom, user interface elements in the same location look wrong—there’s a visual conflict between the bar and other elements. In this sense, the home indicator “protects” this region of the screen from designers or engineers that are unaware of the functionality of the iPhone X. It doesn’t take a UI designer to see something is wrong here. Now that we’re all on the same page, let’s get back to our original question: “What color is the home indicator?” Part 1 — The Beginning On September 13, 2017, I answered a Stack Overflow question asking how to change the color of the home indicator. At the time, the iPhone X hadn’t been publicly released, but the latest version of Xcode included an iPhone X simulator. Running a simple test app in the simulator revealed that the home indicator’s color was based on the color of the content below it. The new APIs for the iPhone X were released alongside this same version of Xcode, and there was no public API available to modify the color of the home indicator (which is still the case at the time of writing this post, and probably will always be the case). This made my Stack Overflow answer simple and straightforward: it is not possible to modify the color, and you shouldn’t worry about it, since it’s out of your control and guaranteed to be visible. Because I anticipated this to be a common question, I included some screenshots of the home indicator on top of various background colors.

Some home indicator color examples from my Stack Overflow answer.

This was good enough for me. The home indicator maintains its visibility by sampling the color of the view below it, and picking a gray color that provides sufficient contrast. Part 2 — The Plot Thickens It turns out the home indicator’s color is not that simple. Some further observations poked holes into my “solid-color function” theory. Observation #1: Multiple Colors The first observation is that the home indicator can have multiple colors, similar to a gradient. In the following example, the left side of the screen is black, and the right is white. The home indicator adjusts for this by adopting a lighter color over the dark background, and a darker color over the light background.

If you look close enough, you can see the transition from gray to black. (iOS simulator)

The home indicator can be multiple colors at the same time, and smoothly transitions between them. This smooth transition is updated in real time if any of the views behind the home indicator change. Watch the home indicator’s color change as the white view passes underneath. (iOS simulator) In the example above, a small white view is moving back and forth behind the home indicator. The section of the home indicator that covers the white view becomes pure black and smoothly transitions to gray. This behavior is similar to a UIVisualEffectView , which applies a blur over existing content. The home indicator is most likely taking a sample of the nearby colors in order to get the blend effect seen in the image above. (Besides looking good, this functionality might help prevent burn-in on the OLED display.) Observation #2: Same Background, Different Home Indicator Color As I mentioned at the beginning of this post, I noticed an unusual behavior when a share sheet passed beneath the home indicator. Home indicator starts light, share sheet passing makes it dark. (real iPhone X) This was the most surprising observation — there is not a simple 1-to-1 mapping between background colors and home indicator colors. At this point I was determined to learn more via experimentation. Part 3 — The Investigation Begins My first order of business was to determine the formula for the home indicator color on the iOS simulator. From my previous observations, the iOS simulator’s behavior was more predictable than a real device. I created a new iOS app as a laboratory for my future experiements. The app was simple—all I needed was an easy way to change the background color behind the home indicator. A slider and stepper control the background color’s gray value, which is displayed as a large number in the center of the screen. The app created for testing the home indicator. My goal was to determine the home indicator color for every possible gray background color. I could graph this data and see if a formula applied to it. Since there were only 256 possibilities, I took the manual approach, using macOS’s built-in “Digital Color Meter” app to get the home indicator color for each value. I graphed the results. It was not a linear function, an exponential function, or any kind of “nice” function you might see in math class. The graph was … odd.

This was not what I was expecting. It was a step function but with uneven steps. It had a few distinct sections: a period of (relatively) light gray, two big steps, a series of small steps, steps in the reverse direction, and a period of pure black. The most unusual part was that the home indicator color was not always decreasing. There was a period (around rgb 170–190) where it became lighter as the background became lighter. Why did the graph look like this? What would the same experiment have similar results on a real device? I needed to know. Part 4 — The Investigation Continues My next task was to perform the same experiment on a real device. It was immediately obvious that the results were going to be dramatically different. To collect data on a real device, I used the same app from before. I streamed a live preview of the iPhone screen to my computer via QuickTime. This removed any discoloration from the True Tone display, as well as allowed me to use the Digital Color Meter app to easily inspect the colors. Another factor added to the complexity on a real device—the red, green, and blue values were not always the same. On the simulator, the RGB values were identical, resulting in colors like RGB(54, 54, 54). On a real device, they were almost never the same, but were very close, resulting in colors like RGB(211, 209, 212). When recording the results, I took the average of the individual RGB values. Here are the results, compared with the previous simulator data.

The colors on a real device (red line) follow a similar trend to those on the simulator (blue line), except offset by a significant margin. The simulator home indicator is always very dark, while the device home indicator is either very light or very dark. The graph for the real device is noisy. Overall it follows a smooth trend, but jumps up and down and looks rough. This is more than just a side-effect of my averaging, and the noise is consistent. If the experiment is repeated, the noise follows the exact same pattern. However, the graph above doesn’t tell the whole story. The values presented above were gathered by starting the background completely black and incrementing the RGB values one at a time (going from 0 to 255). When the values are gathered in the opposite direction, the results are different. At a certain point, the home indicator color “falls off the cliff” in its transition from light to dark or dark to light, and animates for a brief period of time, as shown in the previous gif with the purple background color. Depending on whether the background starts light or dark, the cliff occurs in a different place. Let’s take a look at a new graph comparing the results from “going up” (black to white) and “going down” (white to black).

The blue line above is the same as the previous graph’s red line. Its data points were collected left to right (0 to 255, “going up”). The orange line is the same data, but collected in the opposite direction (255 to 0, “going down”). The red line represents the points where the home indicator and the view background are the same color. The “going up” and “going down” lines follow a similar path, but have a different noise pattern. Interestingly, they have the exact same noise pattern in the darkest range (0–80). From this graph we can tell that the “cliffs” occur when the color of the home indicator is coming too close to the color of the background. It even appears as if the “going up” and “going down” lines are being pushed away by the red line, actively trying to resist becoming exactly the same color as the background. At a certain point, the home indicator flips to being very dark or very light. This explains the shift in color in the app with the purple background. The purple color must be in a region between the two cliffs. Based on the previous color of the home indicator, it could either be light or dark. When the white activity view animates behind the home indicator as it is dismissed, the home indicator transitions from its light state to its dark state, and re-settles at the dark-equivelevnt value for the purple background color. Part 5 — The Investigation Becomes Colorful All the tests up to this point have used grayscale backgrounds. How would the results differ if we used colored backgrounds instead? I repeated the same experiment, but instead of modifying the gray color, I modified the hue on an HSB color scale. I kept the saturation (S) and brightness (B) at their maximum values to get the most vibrant and distinct colors. I only tested these colors “going up”, which in this case means from hue 0 (red) to hue 255 (red) in rainbow order.

The first observation is that there are two cliffs — once when the color becomes yellow, and again when the color becomes dark blue. This occurs because of the relative “brightness” of the colors. The next observation is the difference between the simulator and a real device. The colors follow the same general trends, but the real device’s home indicator color is noisier and can reach brighter values. These are fascinating findings so far. Aside from testing every possible background color, there’s not much else we can discover from observation alone. Now I was curious exactly how the home indicator is implemented—is it a UIView ? CALayer ? UIVisualEffectView ? Something else? What is making it behave in this way? Let’s find out. Part 6 — We Need to Go Deeper! At this point I turned to my friend and iOS expert Ian McDowell. He was able to point me in the right direction—using the iPhone X Simulator and Xcode’s debugging tools to find the home indicator. The iOS “home screen” is actually an app called SpringBoard. We can attach a debugger to the Springboard app running in the iPhone X simulator and use the “Debug View Hierarchy” option in order to inspect the views that make up the home screen, including the home indicator. If you want to follow along at home, here is the process: Launch an iPhone X simulator. In Xcode, select Debug > Attach to Process… > SpringBoard. When SpringBoard is running, select the Debug View Heirarchy button. Deep in the view hierarchy we find an MTLumaDodgePillView which is a subview of an SBHomeGrabberView . Sounds like we found the home indicator!

We found the home indicator!

The name MTLumaDodgePillView makes sense. It confirms our observed behavior of the home indicator, that its color contrasts the background based on its current brightness. Can we go deeper yet? SpringBoard has another cool feature: a hidden debug menu. It turns out there’s an entire section for modifying properties of the home indicator. In this debug menu, the home indicator is called a “grabber”.

So many fun sliders to play with. 😍