iconipy
Say goodbye to the tedious hassle of graphic programs! Now you can create stunning icons directly from your code. With the look and feel defined right in the code, adjustments are a breeze. Plus, the included icon sets can easily be expanded with your own sets based on font files. 🎨✨
Installation
pip install iconipy
Usage
First you initialize an "IconFactory" with an icon set and look-and-feel settings like this:
from iconipy import IconFactory
create_button_icon = IconFactory(
icon_set = 'lucide',
icon_size = 64,
font_size = 38,
font_color = (0, 0, 0, 255), # black solid
outline_color = 'dimgrey',
outline_width = 6,
background_color = 'silver',
background_radius = 10
)
Then you create your icons:
icon_home = create_button_icon.asPil('house') # PIL Image
icon_reload = create_button_icon.asQPixmap('refresh-cw') # Qt based frameworks
icon_files = create_button_icon.asTkPhotoImage('files') # tkinter, ttkbootstrap, PySimpleGUI, FreeSimpleGUI
icon_exit_app = create_button_icon.asRawList('log-out') # DearPyGUI
Depending on your GUI toolkit's whims, you can create PIL Image Objects, ByteIO Objects, Byte-Strings, Raw Pixel Lists, TkPhotoImage Objects, QImage Objects, save to file, and more.
You need to preview an icon? Here we go:
create_button_icon.show('house')
The icon sets you can choose from include: lucide, boxicons, lineicons, material_icons_regular, material_icons_round_regular, material_icons_sharp_regular, and material_icons_outlined_regular.
Feeling adventurous? Dump all the icons to your hard drive and explore:
create_button_icon.saveAll(<path to target directory>)
You need a hand? Check what the icon set has to offer:
print(create_button_icon.search('hand'))
Just want a list with all icon names? No problem:
print(create_button_icon.icon_names)
More info
Visit https://github.com/digidigital/iconipy or https://iconipy.digidigital.de for sample code for the most popular GUI toolkits and detailed documentation.