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react-icons
Advanced tools
The react-icons package provides a large collection of icons from various icon libraries that can be easily used in React applications. It allows developers to include icons using React components, which can be styled and manipulated like any other React component.
Importing and using an icon
This feature allows you to import an icon from a specific icon library (in this case, Font Awesome) and use it as a React component in your application.
import { FaBeer } from 'react-icons/fa';
function App() {
return <h3> Lets go for a <FaBeer />? </h3>;
}
Styling icons
Icons can be styled using inline styles or CSS classes, just like any other React component. This code sample demonstrates inline styling to change the color and size of the icon.
import { FaBeer } from 'react-icons/fa';
function App() {
return <FaBeer style={{ color: 'blue', fontSize: '50px' }} />;
}
Combining icons with other components
React-icons can be easily combined with other components, such as buttons from a UI library like React Bootstrap. This allows for more complex and visually appealing components.
import { FaBeer } from 'react-icons/fa';
import { Button } from 'react-bootstrap';
function App() {
return (
<Button variant='primary'>
Order a beer <FaBeer />
</Button>
);
}
This is a set of Material Design Icons for React. It is similar to react-icons in that it provides a large set of icons, but it is focused solely on Material Design Icons, whereas react-icons offers icons from multiple libraries.
This package is a React component for Font Awesome icons. It is similar to react-icons, but it is dedicated to Font Awesome icons only. react-icons, on the other hand, includes Font Awesome among many other icon libraries.
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.
yarn add react-icons
# or
npm install react-icons --save
example usage
import { FaBeer } from "react-icons/fa";
function Question() {
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 react-icons
you import from.
For example, to use an icon from Material Design, your import would be: import { ICON_NAME } from 'react-icons/md';
Note This option has not had a new release for some time. More info https://github.com/react-icons/react-icons/issues/593
If your project grows in size, this option is available. This method has the trade-off that it takes a long time to install the package.
yarn add @react-icons/all-files
# or
npm install @react-icons/all-files --save
example usage
import { FaBeer } from "@react-icons/all-files/fa/FaBeer";
function Question() {
return (
<h3>
Lets go for a <FaBeer />?
</h3>
);
}
You can add more icons by submitting pull requests or creating issues.
You can configure react-icons props using React Context API.
Requires React 16.3 or higher.
import { IconContext } from "react-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 |
Import path has changed. You need to rewrite from the old style.
// OLD IMPORT STYLE
import FaBeer from "react-icons/lib/fa/beer";
function Question() {
return (
<h3>
Lets go for a <FaBeer />?
</h3>
);
}
// NEW IMPORT STYLE
import { FaBeer } from "react-icons/fa";
function Question() {
return (
<h3>
Lets go for a <FaBeer />?
</h3>
);
}
Ending up with a large JS bundle? Check out this issue.
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/react-icons
can be deleted.
yarn remove @types/react-icons
npm remove @types/react-icons
./build-script.sh
will build the whole project. See also CI scripts for more information.
yarn
cd packages/react-icons
yarn fetch # fetch icon sources
yarn build
First, check the discussion to see if anyone would like to add an icon set.
https://github.com/react-icons/react-icons/discussions/categories/new-icon-set
The SVG files to be fetched are managed in this file. Edit this file and run yarn fetch && yarn check && yarn build
.
https://github.com/react-icons/react-icons/blob/master/packages/react-icons/src/icons/index.ts
Note The project is not actively accepting PR for the preview site at this time.
The preview site is the react-icons
website, built in Astro+React.
cd packages/react-icons
yarn fetch
yarn build
cd ../preview-astro
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 fetch
yarn build
cd ../demo
yarn start
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.
MIT
FAQs
SVG React icons of popular icon packs using ES6 imports
The npm package react-icons receives a total of 2,190,014 weekly downloads. As such, react-icons popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react-icons demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 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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