Security News
Supply Chain Attack Detected in Solana's web3.js Library
A supply chain attack has been detected in versions 1.95.6 and 1.95.7 of the popular @solana/web3.js library.
@entur/icons
Advanced tools
This package contains the tooltip component.
💡 Looking for the documentation?
npm install @entur/icons
# or if you are using Yarn:
yarn add @entur/icons
import { AddIcon } from '@entur/icons'; // Import specific icon
<AddIcon />;
Please refer to the documentation for usage information.
This package contains all SVG files, as well as a script to create optimized React components from those SVG files.
If you're adding an icon, please add the SVG file to the appropriate svg/
folder. Make sure you give it a unique name, and make sure it looks correct in a browser after exporting it.
If you're changing an existing icon, just update the existing SVG file with the new source code.
Unlike most other packages in our design system, this one doesn't use TSDX or TypeScript. This is because TSDX doesn't support the tools we need to optimize our SVG files. Instead, we've opted for configuring Rollup directly.
FAQs
This package contains the icon components.
The npm package @entur/icons receives a total of 2,143 weekly downloads. As such, @entur/icons popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @entur/icons demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
A supply chain attack has been detected in versions 1.95.6 and 1.95.7 of the popular @solana/web3.js library.
Research
Security News
A malicious npm package targets Solana developers, rerouting funds in 2% of transactions to a hardcoded address.
Security News
Research
Socket researchers have discovered malicious npm packages targeting crypto developers, stealing credentials and wallet data using spyware delivered through typosquats of popular cryptographic libraries.