View Source Iconify for Phoenix
Phoenix helpers for using 100,000+ SVG icons from 100+ icon sets compiled by Iconify (visit that site to browse the sets available and preview the icons)
It copies only the icons you use from the iconify library into your project, preparing them on-the-fly when you first use an icon in a view or component (either at compile time if using the Surface component, or on the first run during development).
It can be configured to embed the icons one of three ways:
css(default): generate a single CSS file containing SVGs of all the icons usedimg(default for emojis): to create SVG files in your static assets, used to be included withimgtags and loaded over HTTP (you may want to include https://github.com/iconfu/svg-inject on your site to enable styling of the SVGs, e.g. to change their colour)inline: to generate a Phoenix Component for each icon used, used to embed the icons assvgtags inline in the HTML of your views (meaning the SVG will be included in LiveView diffs)
installation
Installation
def deps do
[
{:iconify_ex, "~> 0.1.0"}
]
endYou then need to fetch the latest iconify icon sets by running:
cd deps/iconify_ex/assets && yarn
usage
Usage
Add
import Iconifyin your Phoenix or LiveView module where you want to use it (or just once in the macros in your Web module).Set one of these options in config to choose which approach you want to use (see above for explanations):
config :iconify_ex, :mode, :cssconfig :iconify_ex, :mode, :imgconfig :iconify_ex, :mode, :inline
If using CSS mode, you'll need to set some default styles that apply to all icons, either by adding something like this to your app's main CSS:
[iconify] {
background-color: currentColor;
-webkit-mask-size: cover;
mask-size: cover;
min-width: 0.5rem;
min-height: 0.5rem;
}- In all three cases, usage is simple and remains the same:
Embed an icon using default classes (copy the icon name from the iconify website):
<.iconify icon="heroicons-solid:collection" />Specify custom classes:
<.iconify icon="heroicons-solid:collection" class="w-8 h-8 text-base-content" /> Or if you use Surface, it is highly recommended to use the macro component which means icons will be prepared at compile time rather than runtime:
Add alias Iconify.Icon to your Web module, and then:
<#Icon iconify="heroicons-solid:collection" />If your icon is dynamic, you'll still want to use the first form:
<.iconify icon={@my_icon} />