@icon-park/react
v1.4.2
Published
React Icons for IconPark
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IconPark Icons
React Icons for IconPark
Introduction
Features
- Provide more than 2000 icons
- Provide 4 themes:
- outline
- filled
- two-tone
- multi-color
More
Please visit IconPark Website
- Copy SVG
- Copy React Icon component
- Copy Vue Icon component
- Download PNG
- Download SVG
Getting Started
Install
npm install @icon-park/react --save
Include Component
Import an icon from @icon-park/react
at the top of a component and then use it in the render function:
import {Home} from '@icon-park/react';
// examples
<Home/>
<Home theme="filled"/>
Style Sheet
Import the icon style:
import '@icon-park/react/styles/index.css';
Or
import '@icon-park/react/styles/index.less';
Global Config
You can use IconProvider
in @icon-park/react
to set the default config globally:
import {IconProvider, DEFAULT_ICON_CONFIGS} from '@icon-park/react'
import {Home} from '@icon-park/react';
const IconConfig = {...DEFAULT_ICON_CONFIGS, prefix: 'icon'}
function App() {
return (
<IconProvider value={IconConfig}>
<Home/>
<Home theme="filled"/>
</IconProvider>
)
}
Import on Demand
You can use babel-plugin-import to import icons on demand.
Set config like this:
{
"plugins": [
[
"import",
{
"libraryName": "@icon-park/react",
"libraryDirectory": "es/icons",
"camel2DashComponentName": false
}
]
]
}
Icon Component
We recommend loading icons on demand, because this can greatly reduce the volume of compiled code。 However, in some scenarios similar to remote loading menus, direct reference to all icons can reduce the development cost.
Usage:
import Icon, {IconType} from '@icon-park/react/es/all';
import React, {Fragment} from 'react';
export function Demo(props: {type: IconType}): JSX.Element {
const {type} = props;
return (
<Fragment>
<Icon type={type} theme="filled" />
<Icon type="AddText" theme="filled" />
<Icon type="add-text" />
</Fragment>
)
}
You can do this when you are not sure whether the type
property is legal:
import Icon, {ALL_ICON_KEYS, IconType} from '@icon-park/react/es/all';
import React, {Fragment} from 'react';
export function Demo(props: {type: IconType}): JSX.Element {
const {type} = props;
if(ALL_ICON_KEYS.indexOf(type) < 0) {
return (
<span>Not Exists</span>
);
}
return (
<Fragment>
<Icon type={type} theme="filled" />
<Icon type="People" theme="filled" />
<Icon type="Switch" />
</Fragment>
)
}
Embed IconPark in your project
If you need to use additional information such as icon name, author, category, label and creation time, you can use the icons.json
file located in the root directory of each NPM.
Props
| prop | description | type | default | note | | ---------- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | theme | Theme of the icons. | 'outline' | 'filled' | 'two-tone' | 'multi-color' | 'outline' | | size | The width/height of the icon | number | string | '1em' | | spin | Rotate icon with animation | boolean | false | | fill | Colors of theme | string | string[] | 'currentColor' | | strokeLinecap | the stroke-linecap prop of svg element | 'butt' | 'round' | 'square' | 'round' | | strokeLinejoin | the stroke-linejoin prop of svg element | 'miter' | 'round' | 'bevel' | 'round' | | strokeWidth | the stroke-width prop of svg element | number | 4 |
Other props
You can use all props which are defined in HTMLAttributes<HTMLSpanElement>>
, such as:
- className
- style
- onClick
- ...