react-social-icons
A set of beautiful svg social icons. Easily used in React. No images or
external css dependencies. Example
Install
npm install react-social-icons
yarn add react-social-icons
pnpm add react-social-icons
Usage
Pass in the url
prop of your social network, and the icon will be rendered.
import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'
import { SocialIcon } from 'react-social-icons'
const Component = <SocialIcon url="https://twitter.com" />
ReactDOM.render(Component, document.body)
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.body).render(Component)
See more usage options on the example site.
This library supports TypeScript since v5.2.0.
(type declarations)
Code Splitting and Tree Shaking
Reduce the size of bundled code from this library by importing the SocialIcon
component directly and only importing the icons you need. Bundled code using
only one icon will be 20 times smaller, or about 5% of the full library's size
(from 26.3kb for all icons to as small as 1.5kb for one icon). The size of the
bundled library will scale linearly with each icon you import. Many bundlers
will tree shake the unused icons from the final code-split bundle.
import { SocialIcon } from 'react-social-icons/component'
import 'react-social-icons/vimeo'
import 'react-social-icons/meetup'
<SocialIcon url="www.vimeo.com" />
<SocialIcon url="www.meetup.com" />
<SocialIcon url="www.pinterest.com" />
Props
Property | Type | Required | Description |
---|
url | String | No | The rendered component will link to this url and show the social network's icon. |
network | String | No | Override which network icon to render |
bgColor | String | No | Override the background fill color (defaults to social network's color) |
fgColor | String | No | Override the icon's fill color (defaults to transparent) |
label | String | No | Set the aria-label attribute on the rendered anchor tag (defaults to the social network's name) |
className | String | No | Specify a class to attach to the rendered anchor tag |
style | Object | No | Override style properties passed to the rendered anchor tag |
href | String | No | Override the link while keeping the icon matching prop url |
as | String | No | Override the root element of the component (defaults to 'a') |
fallback | String | No | Specify the icon shown when no network matches the url prop |
url
Sets the link the anchor element points to and renders the icon associated
with the network matching the url
.
<SocialIcon url="www.vimeo.com" />
network
Overrides the icon rendered by the component.
<SocialIcon network="github" />
<SocialIcon network="github" url="www.vimeo.com" />
bgColor
and fgColor
Overrides the background or foreground fill colors. Defaults to the network's
brand color (bg) and transparent (fg).
<SocialIcon bgColor="green" fgColor="blue" />
label
Overrides the ARIA attribute on the anchor element. Defaults to network name.
<SocialIcon label="my video channel" url="www.vimeo.com" />
<SocialIcon aria-label="my video channel" url="www.vimeo.com" />
className
and style
Specify a CSS class and styles for the anchor element. Read more about these
special React props.
<SocialIcon className="colorscheme" style={{ color: 'green' }} />
href
Overrides the anchor link. Ignored when the component decides what icon to
render.
<SocialIcon href="www.github.com" />
href
specifies the anchor link while url
specifies the rendered icon
<SocialIcon href="www.github.com" url="www.vimeo.com" />
as
Set <SocialIcon>
to be any html element you want. Defaults to 'a'.
<SocialIcon as="div" />
fallback
Overrides the default icon shown when a network does not match the given URL.
Accepts a network:
<SocialIcon fallback="pinterest" />
Or an icon definition:
<SocialIcon fallback={{ color, path }} />
The other exports
There are other useful functions and objects exported from the
SocialIcon library.
networkFor
A function that accepts a url string and returns the matching social network
domain name.
import { networkFor } from 'react-social-icons';
import { assert } from 'assert'
assert.equal(networkFor('https://www.pinterest.com'), 'pinterest')
register
A function that accepts the domain name of a social network with an object
definition of the icon's paths and color. It will register the social network
icon with the <SocialIcon>
component, which will have gained the ability to
render the icon for your social network, and update uri_regex
to match the
domain name.
import { register } from 'react-social-icons';
register('mynetwork', {
color: 'red',
path: 'path commands'
})
social_icons
A map that associates social network names to the icon objects with the
network's color and icon paths.
import { social_icons } from 'react-social-icons'
import assert from 'assert'
assert.ok(social_icons instanceof Map)
network_names
and getKeys
network_names
is a set that stores all the registered social network domain
names. getKeys
returns an array of the same information.
import { network_names, getKeys } from 'react-social-icons'
import assert from 'assert'
assert.deepEqual(getKeys(), [...network_names])
assert.ok(network_names instanceof Set)
uri_regex
A regex for urls that will match any social network domain names that are
registered. (this will not match mailto:
links or return the default network,
use networkFor
instead)
import { uri_regex } from 'react-social-icons'
import assert from 'assert'
assert.equal(uri_regex.exec('https://www.pinterest.com')?.[1], 'pinterest')
Contributing
Contributors are welcome. See CONTRIBUTING.md.
FAQ
How do I open the link in a new tab when the icon is clicked?
Pass the prop target
like so: <SocialIcon target="_blank" url="www.vimeo.com" />
. All props are forwarded to the underlying element, an
anchor.
How do I use code-splitting?
This package packages exposes the component code and icon definitions in
separate files with a simple import interface. There are several useful tools
that implement features like tree-shaking to reduce the size of bundled code.
Certain browsers contain features that let you important un-bundled code
directly. An effort has been made to keep distribution code files simple,
separate, and small.
with ES6 browser imports
Refer to a list of compatible
browsers
and import files directly from your own servers or a
CDN.
with a bundler
Webpack and
Rollup will tree shake any
unused code from this package when you are bundling your code.
How do I add a new icon?
Follow the instructions in CONTRIBUTING.md.
How do I change the color on hover?
There are a couple approaches to changing the color of the icon on hover. These
can be modified to fit your particular use case by examining what attributes
are on the underlying HTML element.
currentColor
and className
In a stylesheet, apply two fills to the social icon. One by default, and one
on hover.
.custom-class .social-svg-icon {
fill: green;
}
.custom-class:hover .social-svg-icon {
fill: red;
}
In your component, set the fgColor
prop to currentColor
to inherit colors
from the stylesheet rather than the inline style rule from the component.
<SocialIcon className="custom-class" fgColor="currentColor" />
!important
override
You can override the fill color by using the !important CSS declaration
.social-svg-icon {
fill: green !important;
}
And simply use the icon like normal.
<SocialIcon />
How do I render the mastodon icon?
Mastodon is a federated social network, each instance may have a different
domain name associated with it. Specify the network attribute as "mastodon" to
render the Mastodon icon.
<SocialIcon network="mastodon" url="https://techhub.social/" />
Tree-shaking with Typescript causes a build error where the type declarations cannot be found
When importing react-social-icons/component
in a Typescript project, if your
tsconfig.json
is misconfigured you may run into the error message TS2307: Cannot find module 'react-social-icons/component' or its corresponding type declarations
.
To fix the issue, set "moduleResolution"
in your tsconfig.json
to
"bundler"
.
The error occurs when the "moduleResolution"
property
in your Typescript configuration is set to some variant of classic
, or
node
. Tree-shaking is a strategy of Node.js builds targeting a browser
environment. They take advantage of a bundler feature provided by tools like
webpack
or
rollup
. If you are using
react-social-icons
in a project targeting a non-browser environment, you
should use the .cjs
build of this package, which will be resolved
automatically if you import from react-social-icons
in your project.
import { SocialIcon } from 'react-social-icons'
import { SocialIcon } from 'react-social-icons/component'