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Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
@meronex/icons
Advanced tools
Include popular icons in your React projects easily with react-icons
, which utilizes ES6 imports that allows you to include only the icons that your project is using.
A react-icons fork, for credits and fork motivation read here.
Go to icons.meronex.com
yarn add @meronex/icons
npm install @meronex/icons --save
import FaBeer from '@meronex/icons/FaBeer';
class Question extends React.Component {
render() {
return <h3> Lets go for a <FaBeer />? </h3>
}
}
View the documentation for further usage examples and how to use icons from other packages. NOTE: each Icon package has it's own subfolder under @meronex/icons
you import from.
For example, to use an icon from Material Design, your import would be: import ICON_NAME from 'react-icons/md/ICON_NAME';
Icon Library | License | Version |
---|---|---|
Font Awesome | CC BY 4.0 License | 5.12.1 |
Ionicons | MIT | 4.5.6 |
Material Design icons | Apache License Version 2.0 | 3.0.1 |
Material Design Community icons | SIL | 52442e9e6ea4424c41fb6489911c6f87fe83a7a8 |
Typicons | CC BY-SA 3.0 | 2.0.9 |
Github Octicons icons | MIT | 8.5.0 |
Feather | MIT | 4.21.0 |
Game Icons | CC BY 3.0 | a53463d41d4f055fa71097ae74da4c508c9bb09d |
Weather Icons | SIL OFL 1.1 | 2.0.10 |
Devicons | MIT | 1.8.0 |
Ant Design Icons | MIT | 4.0.0 |
Bootstrap Icons | MIT | 1.0.0-alpha3 |
Remix Icon | Apache License Version 2.0 | 2.3.0 |
Flat Color Icons | MIT | 1.0.2 |
Grommet-Icons | Apache License Version 2.0 | 4.4.0 |
css.gg | MIT | 2.0.0 |
IcoMoon Free | CC BY 4.0 License | 1.0.0 |
BoxIcons | CC BY 4.0 License | 2.0.5 |
VS Code Icons | CC BY 4.0 | 0.0.1 |
flag-icon-css | MIT License | 3.5.0 |
Logos | CC0 1.0 Universal | 2018.01 |
Simple Icons | CC0 1.0 Universal | 1.17.1-998-gd4b07ad4 |
Heroicons | MIT | v0.3.7 |
You can configure react-icons props using React Context API.
Requires React 16.3 or higher.
import { IconContext } from "@meronex/icons";
<IconContext.Provider value={{ color: "blue", className: "global-class-name" }}>
<div>
<FaFolder />
</div>
</IconContext.Provider>
Key | Default | Notes |
---|---|---|
color | undefined (inherit) | |
size | 1em | |
className | undefined | |
style | undefined | Can overwrite size and color |
attr | undefined | Overwritten by other attributes |
title | undefined | Icon description for accessibility |
From version 3, vertical-align: middle
is not automatically given. Please use IconContext to specify className or specify an inline style.
<IconContext.Provider value={{ style: { verticalAlign: 'middle' } }}>
className
StylingComponent
<IconContext.Provider value={{ className: 'react-icons' }}>
CSS
.react-icons {
vertical-align: middle;
}
Dependencies on @types/@meronex/icons
can be deleted.
yarn remove @types/@meronex/icons
npm remove @types/@meronex/icons
yarn
yarn submodule # fetch icon sources
cd packages/react-icons
yarn build
The preview site is the meronex-icons
website, built in NextJS.
cd packages/react-icons
yarn build
cd ../preview
yarn start
The demo is a Create React App boilerplate with react-icons
added as a dependency for easy testing.
cd packages/react-icons
yarn build
cd ../demo
yarn start
From the main directory (where this file is located) run the following command:
cd packages/react-icons git submodule add --name <name> <git-repo-url-for-the-new-icon-set> packages/react-icons/src/icons/<name>
yarn build
yarn start
Add the name, URL, and the license link to the table in the ##Icons
section of this file.
Keep the list in alphabetical order.
Add the object with the following structure:
{
id: "xy", // Two-letter id
name: "e.g. Xenon Yellow Icons", // The full icon set name
contents: [
{
files: path.resolve(__dirname, "<relative-path-to-git-submodule>/<path-to-svg-icons>/<filter>"),
formatter: name => `Xy${name}` // So that all icon names from this set will start with "Xy"
}
],
// URL of the github repo
projectUrl: "https://github.com/xy/xy-icons",
license: "Apache License Version 2.0", // License type
licenseUrl: "http://www.apache.org/licenses/" // URL of the license definition
}
to the icons
array.
SVG is supported by all major browsers. With react-icons
, you can serve only the needed icons instead of one big font file to the users, helping you to recognize which icons are used in your project.
This is a fork of react-icons and was created specifically to resolve the bundling size issue #154, see here.
It was meant to be used temporary until the fix PR merged upstream however due to the lack of activity at the react-icons repo, I have decided to put publish it as it could perhaps save others the patching time and effort I had to go through.
As I said that was initially meant for internal consumption, the bundle issue was a show stopper for us, I've submitted a PR which is not merged yet and this issue has been open for two plus years. I don't have time/desire to redo the preview site, so I just shared what I have.
Feel free to fork edit and host else where if you need to as I did.
I've merged some open pull requests, added icons and fixed some performance issue with the preview site, more specifically:
I'd rather have the changes merged upstream I don't prefer fragmented react community, however I plan to keep this maintained until react-icons regains momentum. My view on this that if you publish open source, then you've to be responsible for the longevity of it when others depend on it and willing to offer a hand, otherwise don't publish at all.
MIT
FAQs
SVG React icons of popular icon packs using ES6 imports
The npm package @meronex/icons receives a total of 2,786 weekly downloads. As such, @meronex/icons popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @meronex/icons demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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.
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