Research
Security News
Kill Switch Hidden in npm Packages Typosquatting Chalk and Chokidar
Socket researchers found several malicious npm packages typosquatting Chalk and Chokidar, targeting Node.js developers with kill switches and data theft.
lucide-static
Advanced tools
Lucide is a community-run fork of Feather Icons, open for anyone to contribute icons.
This package include the following lucide implementations:
What is lucide? Read it here.
This package is suitable for very specific use cases for example if you want to use icon fonts, svg sprites, normal svgs or Common.js Svg strings in your javascript project.
[!WARNING] It is not recommended to use this package for svg sprites or icon fonts for web pages/applications, for prototyping it is ok. We recommend to bundlers for web applications to make sure you only bundle the used icons from this icon library (Threeshaking). Otherwise it will load all the icons, making you webpage loading slower. Threeshaking is only available in the packages: lucide, lucide-react, lucide-vue, lucide-vue-next, lucide-angular, lucide-preact
yarn add lucide-static
or
npm install lucide-static
<!-- Svg File -->
<img src="https://unpkg.com/lucide-static@latest/icons/home.svg" />
<!-- Icon Font -->
<style>
@font-face {
font-family: 'LucideIcons';
src: url(https://unpkg.com/lucide-static@latest/font/Lucide.ttf) format('truetype');
}
</style>
Checkout the codesandbox examples.
To use it in for example html:
<!-- Svg File -->
<img src="~lucide-static/icons/home.svg" />
.home-icon {
background-image: url(~lucide-static/icons/home.svg);
}
Make sure you have the correct webpack loaders to make this work. url-loader
You can simply import each svg by targeting lucide-static/icons/{icon-name}.svg
.
To use svgs in your project you can for example use a svg loader.
import arrowRightIcon from 'lucide-static/icons/arrow-right';
// return string of a svg
You may need additional loader for this.
<!-- Icon Sprite, not recommended for production! -->
<img src="lucide-static/sprite.svg#home" />
<!-- or -->
<svg
width="24"
height="24"
fill="none"
stroke="currentColor"
stroke-width="2"
stroke-linecap="round"
stroke-linejoin="round"
>
<use href="#alert-triangle" />
</svg>
<svg>...sprite svg</svg>
If you'd prefer, you can use CSS to hold your base SVG properties
.lucide-icon {
width: 24px;
height: 24px;
stroke: currentColor;
fill: none;
stroke-width: 2;
stroke-linecap: round;
stroke-linejoin: round;
}
and update the svg as follows
<svg
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
class="lucide-icon"
>
<use
href="#alert-triangle"
/>
</svg>
<svg>
...sprite svg
</svg>
@import ('~lucide-static/font/lucide.css');
<div class="icon-home"></div>
To use lucide icons in your Nodejs project you can import each icon as:
const { messageSquare } = require('lucide-static/lib');
Note: Each icon name is in camelCase.
const express = require('express');
const { messageSquare } = require('lucide-static/lib');
const app = express();
const port = 3000;
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.send(`
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Page Title</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Lucide Icons</h1>
<p>This is a lucide icon ${messageSquare}</p>
</body>
</html>
`);
});
app.listen(port, () => {
console.log(`Example app listening at http://localhost:${port}`);
});
For more info on how to contribute please see the contribution guidelines.
Caught a mistake or want to contribute to the documentation? Edit this page on Github
Join the community on our Discord server!
Lucide is totally free for commercial use and personally use, this software is licensed under the ISC License.
FAQs
Lucide is a community-run fork of Feather Icons, open for anyone to contribute icons.
The npm package lucide-static receives a total of 29,924 weekly downloads. As such, lucide-static popularity was classified as popular.
We found that lucide-static 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.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers found several malicious npm packages typosquatting Chalk and Chokidar, targeting Node.js developers with kill switches and data theft.
Security News
pnpm 10 blocks lifecycle scripts by default to improve security, addressing supply chain attack risks but sparking debate over compatibility and workflow changes.
Product
Socket now supports uv.lock files to ensure consistent, secure dependency resolution for Python projects and enhance supply chain security.