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@nuxt/icon
Advanced tools
![nuxt-icon](https://github.com/nuxt-modules/icon/assets/904724/ae673805-06ad-4c05-820e-a8445c7224ce)
Add 200,000+ ready to use icons to your Nuxt application, based on Iconify.
[!NOTE] You are viewing the
v1.0
version of this module, which is a complete rewrite for a better developer experience and performance. If you are migrating fromv0.6
, please check this PR for the full list of changes.
Run the following command to add the module to your project:
npx nuxi module add icon
That's it, you can now use the <Icon />
in your components!
✨ If you are using VS Code, you can use the Iconify IntelliSense extension by @antfu
Props:
name
(required): icon name or global component namesize
: icon size (default: 1em
)mode
: icon rendering mode (svg
or css
, default: css
)Attributes:
When using an icon from Iconify, an <span>
or <svg>
will be created based on the rendering mode, you can give all the attributes of the native element.
<Icon name="uil:github" color="black" />
You can use any name from the https://icones.js.org collection:
<Icon name="uil:github" />
It supports the i-
prefix (for example, i-uil-github
).
It's highly recommended to install the icon data locally with
npm i -D @iconify-json/collection-name
For example, to use the uil:github
icon, install it's collection with @iconify-json/uil
. This way the icons can be served locally or from your serverless functions, which is faster and more reliable on both SSR and client-side.
When the name
matches a global registered component, it will be rendered as that component (in this case mode
will be ignored):
<Icon name="MyComponent" />
Note that MyComponent
needs to be inside components/global/
folder (see example).
You can use local SVG files to create a custom Iconify collection.
For example, place your icons' SVG files under a folder on your choice, for example ./assets/my-icons
:
assets/my-icons
├── foo.svg
├── bar-outline.svg
In your nuxt.config.ts
, add an item in icon.customCollections
:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'nuxt-icon'
],
icon: {
customCollections: [
{
prefix: 'my-icon',
dir: './assets/my-icons'
},
],
},
})
Then you can use the icons like this:
<template>
<Icon name="my-icon:foo" />
<Icon name="my-icon:bar-outline" />
</template>
To update the default size (1em
) of the <Icon />
, create an app.config.ts
with the icon.size
property.
Update the default class (.icon
) of the <Icon />
with the icon.class
property, for a headless Icon, set icon
.class: ''`.
You can also define aliases to make swapping out icons easier by leveraging the icon.aliases
property.
// app.config.ts
export default defineAppConfig({
icon: {
size: '24px', // default <Icon> size applied
class: 'icon', // default <Icon> class applied
mode: 'css', // default <Icon> mode applied
aliases: {
'nuxt': 'logos:nuxt-icon',
}
}
})
The icons will have the default size of 24px
and the nuxt
icon will be available:
<Icon name="nuxt" />
By default, this module will create a server endpoint /api/_nuxt_icon/:collection
to serve the icons from your local server bundle. When requesting an icon that does not exist in the local bundle, it will fallback to requesting the official Iconify API. You can disable the fallback by setting icon.fallbackToApi
to false
, or set up your own Iconify API and update icon.iconifyApiEndpoint
to your own API endpoint.
You can use the Icon
component in a render function (useful if you create a functional component), for this you can import it from #components
:
import { Icon } from '#components'
See an example of a <MyIcon>
component:
<script setup>
import { Icon } from '#components'
const MyIcon = h(Icon, { name: 'uil:twitter' })
</script>
<template>
<p><MyIcon /></p>
</template>
pnpm install
(install pnpm
with corepack enable
, learn more)npm run dev:prepare
to generate type stubs.npm run dev
to start playground in development mode.FAQs
![nuxt-icon](https://github.com/nuxt-modules/icon/assets/904724/ae673805-06ad-4c05-820e-a8445c7224ce)
The npm package @nuxt/icon receives a total of 61,826 weekly downloads. As such, @nuxt/icon popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @nuxt/icon demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 6 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.
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