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A quick helper for using FontAwesome icons in Rails.
This gem is just the code for using FontAwesome in your Rails applications.
You must still have your own FontAwesome Pro license, or install the Free package.
Add the following to config/application.rb
:
require 'fa'
Copy the complete js
and css
directories from the
web download into the
corresponding locations in your app, and ensure you correctly include all files.
You can also link into the FontAwesome CDN, in either of two ways:
You can use this helper method in your layout:
FA::Link.new(version: 'v5.3.1', integrity: 'sha384-some-key-here').safe
Or, go to the FontAwesome How to Use page and copy the appropriate CDN link tag.
Be sure to also register each domain that will use this CDN link.
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.3.1/css/all.css" integrity="sha384-some-key-here" crossorigin="anonymous">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://pro.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.3.1/css/all.css" integrity="sha384-some-key-here" crossorigin="anonymous">
Use this helper method in your layout:
FA::Link.kit('kit-id')
The FA
module contains three main subclasses: Icon
, Span
, and Layer
.
Argument formatting is consistent throughout.
Icon
and Span
are the units of this module. Both can be used individually.
The first argument of each class's new
method can be either a String/Symbol of
the name of the FontAwesome icon, or a Hash containing the complete
configuration for the object.
Layer
is used to combine multiple units into a single end object. It takes
advantage of the Hash input style on Icon
and Span
to allow it to accept a
single configuration Array for the entire stack.
All three classes respond to two output methods: raw
and safe
.
raw
outputs the formatted string directlysafe
attempts to call .html_safe
on the formatted string, if availableFor convenience, each class also has a p
method, which will create a new
instance, and return its safe
output.
There is also a Build
class that exposes a DSL to construct a Layer
.
A single FontAwesome icon.
fa #=> String / Symbol – OR Hash
options #=> Hash
style: Symbol # One of [:solid, :regular, :light, :brands], default :solid
mode: Symbol # One of [:sharp], default: nil
size: Integer # Stepped scaling factor
css: String # Arbitrary CSS classes, space-delimited
raw_css: Hash # Arbitrary raw CSS, as a hash of attributes and values
fa: String # Arbitrary FA classes, space-delimited – each is automatically prefixed with `fa-`
title: String #=> Tooltip text
grow: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to grow by
shrink: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to shrink by
rotate: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to rotate by
up: Integer #=> Translation value upward
down: Integer #=> Translation value downward
left: Integer #=> Translation value leftward
right: Integer #=> Translation value rightward
A single FontAwesome span – counters or text labels – to be used in a Layer.
fa #=> String / Symbol – one of [:counter, :text] – OR Hash
text #=> String
options #=> Hash
position: Symbol # Indicator of which corner to display on – one of [:tr, :tl, :br, :bl]
css: String # Arbitrary CSS classes, space-delimited
raw_css: Hash # Arbitrary raw CSS, as a hash of attributes and values
fa: String # Arbitrary FA classes, space-delimited – each is automatically prefixed with `fa-`
title: String #=> Tooltip text
grow: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to grow by
shrink: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to shrink by
rotate: Integer #=> Transform value – amount to rotate by
up: Integer #=> Translation value upward
down: Integer #=> Translation value downward
left: Integer #=> Translation value leftward
right: Integer #=> Translation value rightward
A stack of layered FontAwesome icons and spans.
icons #=> Array of Hashes of individual icon/span configurations
title #=> String – tooltip text
grow #=> Integer – additional global scaling factor added to all objects in the stack
css #=> String – arbitrary CSS classes, space-delimited, applied to the layer stack
# Fixed-width lock icon
FA::Icon.p('lock', fa: 'fw')
#=> "<i class='fas fa-fw fa-lock fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='' title=''></i>"
# Duotone fire-alt icon with swapped opacity
FA::Icon.p('fire-alt', fa: 'swap-opacity')
#=> "<i class='fas fa-swap-opacity fa-fire-alt fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='' title=''></i>"
# Duotone fire-alt icon with specified opacities
FA::Icon.p('fire-alt', style: :duotone, raw_css: { '--fa-primary-opacity' => '0.6', '--fa-secondary-opacity' => '0.4' })
#=> "<i class='fad fa-fire-alt fa-1x' style='--fa-primary-opacity: 0.4; --fa-secondary-opacity: 0.6;' data-fa-transform='' title=''></i>"
# Solid sharp house icon
FA::Icon.p('house', mode: :sharp)
#=> "<i class='fas fa-sharp fa-fire-alt fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='' title=''></i>"
# You can also use this simplified configuration option for adding styles
# This is reforatted and merged into :raw_css
# Accepts either snake_case symbols or spear-case strings as keys, and strings or symbols as values
# This is the easiest way to add primary/secondary styles for duotone icons
FA::Icon.p('fire-alt', style: :duotone, fa_styles: { primary_opacity: '0.6', secondary_opacity: '0.4', primary_color: :green, secondary_color: '#DD2200' })
#=> "<i class='fad fa-fire-alt fa-1x' style='--fa-primary-opacity: 0.6; --fa-secondary-opacity: 0.4; --fa-primary-color: green; --fa-secondary-color: #DD2200;' data-fa-transform='' title=''></i>"
# Counter span, with value 5
FA::Span.p('counter', 5)
#=> "<span class='fa-layers-counter ' style='' data-fa-transform=''>5</span>"
# Gray envelope icon with red exclamation mark overlayed, with tooltip 'Invalid email address'
FA::Layer.p([{ name: 'envelope', options: { css: :gray } }, { name: 'exclamation', options: { css: :red } }], title: 'Invalid email address')
#=> "<span class='icon fa-layers fa-stack fa-fw ' title='Invalid email address'>" \
# "<i class='fas fa-stack-1x gray fa-envelope fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='grow-0' title='Invalid email address'></i>" \
# "<i class='fas fa-stack-1x red fa-exclamation fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='grow-0' title='Invalid email address'></i>" \
# "</span>"
# Blue envelope with red counter on the top left corner, with value 7
FA::Layer.p([{ name: 'envelope', options: { css: :blue } }, { name: 'counter', text: 7, options: { css: :red, position: :tl } }])
#=> "<span class='icon fa-layers fa-stack fa-fw ' title=''>" \
# "<i class='fas fa-stack-1x blue fa-envelope fa-1x' style='' data-fa-transform='grow-0' title=''></i>" \
# "<span class='fa-stack-1x red fa-layers-counter fa-layers-top-left' style='' data-fa-transform='grow-0'>7</span>" \
# "</span>"
# The same stack, but using the FA::Build DSL (with various syntaxes).
FA::Build.p do
icon('envelope', css: 'blue')
span('counter', 7, css: 'red', position: :tl)
end
FA::Build.p do |b|
b.icon('envelope', css: 'blue')
b.span('counter', 7, css: 'red', position: :tl)
end
FA::Build.new do |b|
b.icon('envelope', css: 'blue')
b.span('counter', 7, css: 'red', position: :tl)
end.safe
FAQs
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We found that fa_rails demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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