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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
You can install the module manually with:
npm i -D @nuxt/icon
Update your nuxt.config.ts
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
]
})
If you have the legacy module nuxt-icon
installed, you might want to remove it from the modules
list.
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" style="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.
[!NOTE] You may also know you can install
@iconify/json
package to include all iconify icons. This is not recommended because it will increase your server bundle size and building performance. If you choose to do so, we'd recommend to explicitly specify the collection names you need:
export default defineNuxtConfig({ modules: ['@nuxt/icon'], icon: { serverBundle: { collections: ['uil', 'mdi'] // <!--- this } } })
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).
[!TIP] You can also change the component name with:
export default defineNuxtConfig({ icon: { componentName: 'NuxtIcon' } })
You can use local SVG files to create a custom Iconify collection.
For example, place your icons' SVG files under a folder of 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>
Note that custom local collections require you to have a server to serve the API. When setting ssr: false
, the provider will default to the Iconify API (which does not have your custom icons). If you want to build a SPA with server endpoints, you can explicitly set provider: 'server'
:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
ssr: false,
icon: {
provider: 'server', // <-- this
customCollections: [
{
prefix: 'my-icon',
dir: './assets/my-icons'
},
],
},
})
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.
[!NOTE] Note it's
app.config.ts
and notnuxt.config.ts
for runtime configs.
// 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 (you can override the default path by setting icon.localApiEndpoint
to your desired path). 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.
Customizing Icons with the customize Option
The customize option allows you to modify various aspects of the SVG icons used in your project. With this option, you can:
You have full control over SVG content with these customization options.
In a Component You can define a customize function within a component to apply various modifications to your icons.
<script setup lang="ts">
// Define the customize function to modify SVG content
const customize = (content: string, name: string, prefix: string, provider: string) => {
if (prefix !== 'tabler') return content // Ignore Prefix
return content
.replace(/stroke-width="[^"]*"/g, `stroke-width="2"`) // Change stroke width to 2
.replace(/stroke="[^"]*"/g, `stroke="#FF5733"`) // Change stroke color to red
.replace(/fill="[^"]*"/g, `fill="#FF5733"`) // Change fill color to red
.replace(/animation-duration="[^"]*"/g, `animation-duration="1s"`) // Change animation duration to 1s (for animated icons)
.replace(/opacity="[^"]*"/g, `opacity="0.8"`);// Change opacity to 0.8
}
</script>
<template>
<Icon name="tabler:star" :customize="customize" />
</template>
In the App Configuration File:
Alternatively, you can apply these customizations globally in the app.config.ts
file.
// app.config.ts
export default defineAppConfig({
icon: {
customize: (content: string, name: string, prefix: string, provider: string) => {
// ...
},
}
})
With this configuration, all icons throughout your application will have these customizations applied consistently.
Since @nuxt/icon
v1.0, we have introduced the server bundle concept to serve the icons from Nuxt server endpoints. This keeps the client bundle lean and able to load icons on-demand, while having all the dynamic features to use icons that might not be known at build time.
local
This mode will bundle the icon collections you have installed locally (like @iconify-json/*
), into your server bundle as dynamic chunks. The collection data will be loaded on-demand, only when your client request icons from that collection.
remote
Introduced in @nuxt/icon
v1.2, you can now use the remote
server bundle to serve the icons from a remote CDN.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
serverBundle: 'remote',
},
})
Or you can specify the remote provider:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
serverBundle: {
remote: 'jsdelivr', // 'unpkg' or 'github-raw', or a custom function
}
},
})
Which will make server requests to https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@iconify-json/ph/icons.json
to fetch the icons at runtime, instead of bundling them with your server.
Under the hood, instead of bundling () => import('@iconify-json/ph/icons.json')
to your server bundle, it will now use something like () => fetch('https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/@iconify-json/ph/icons.json').then(res => res.json())
, where the collections are not inlined.
This would be useful when server bundle size is a concern, like in serverless or worker environments.
auto
This is the default option, where the module will pick between local
and remote
based your deployment environment. local
will be preffered unless you are deploying to a serverless or worker environment, like Vercel Edge or Cloudflare Workers.
By default, Nitro will bundle the icon collections you have installed locally (like @iconify-json/*
), into your server bundle as dynamic chunks. When you have a large number of icons, this might make your bundling process slow and memory-intensive. You can change to externalize the icons JSON files by setting icon.serverBundle.externalizeIconsJson
to true
.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
serverBundle: {
externalizeIconsJson: true,
}
},
})
Note that this will require your production Node.js server to be able to import JSON files (Note that as in Node.js v22, JSON modules are still an experimental feature). In the final build, it will contain statements like () => import('@iconify-json/ph/icons.json', { with: { type: 'json' } })
.
Also note that in some serverless environments, like Cloudflare Workers, where they don't have dynamic imports, they will always be inlined regardless of this option.
This option will be ignored when icon.serverBundle.remote
is enabled.
If you want to disable the server bundle completely, you can set icon.serverBundle
to false
and provider
to iconify
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
provider: 'iconify',
serverBundle: false,
},
})
This will make requests to Iconify API every time the client requests an icon. We do not recommend doing so unless the other options are not feasible.
For icons that you know you are going to use frequently, you can bundle them with your client bundle to avoid network requests.
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
clientBundle: {
// list of icons to include in the client bundle
icons: [
'uil:github',
'logos:vitejs'
],
// scan all components in the project and include icons
scan: true,
// include all custom collections in the client bundle
includeCustomCollections: true,
// guard for uncompressed bundle size, will fail the build if exceeds
sizeLimitKb: 256,
},
},
})
includeCustomCollections
will include all the custom collections you have defined in icon.customCollections
in the client bundle. It's disabled by default but will automatically enable when ssr: false
is set.
When scan
is enabled, the module will scan all the components in your project and include the icons used in the client bundle. This would significantly reduce the number of network requests needed for statically known icons, but might also increase the client bundle size depending on the number of icons used in your project.
You can also fine-tune tine scanning targets like:
export default defineNuxtConfig({
modules: [
'@nuxt/icon'
],
icon: {
clientBundle: {
scan: {
// note that when you specify those values, the default behavior will be overridden
globInclude: ['components/**/*.vue', /* ... */],
globExclude: ['node_modules', 'dist', /* ... */],
},
},
},
})
[!TIP] Scanning is relying on static analysis, which means only literal usages will be detected. Avoid constructing the icon name dynamically whenever possible.
<template> <!-- Avoid this --> <Icon :name="`carbon:${dark ? 'moon' : 'sun'}`" /> <!-- Prefer this --> <Icon :name="dark ? 'carbon:moon' : 'carbon:sun'" /> </template>
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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