paulfri-react-inlinesvg
v0.4.2
Published
An SVG loader for React
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react-inlinesvg
One of the reasons SVGs are awesome is because you can style them with CSS. Unfortunately, this winds up not being too useful in practice because the style element has to be in the same document. This leaves you with three bad options:
- Embed the CSS in the SVG document
- Can't use your CSS preprocessors (LESS, SASS)
- Can't target parent elements (button hover, etc.)
- Makes maintenance difficult
- Link to a CSS file in your SVG document
- Sharing styles with your HTML means duplicating paths across your project, making maintenance a pain
- Not sharing styles with your HTML means extra HTTP requests (and likely duplicating paths between different SVGs)
- Still can't target parent elements
- Your SVG becomes coupled to your external stylesheet, complicating reuse.
- Embed the SVG in your HTML
- Bloats your HTML
- SVGs can't be cached by browsers between pages.
- A maintenance nightmare
But there's an alternative that sidesteps these issues: load the SVG with an XHR request and then embed it in the document. That's what this component does.
Note
The SVG <use>
element can be used to achieve something similar to
this component. See this article for more information and this
table for browser support and caveats.
Usage
var Isvg = require('react-inlinesvg');
<Isvg src="/path/to/myfile.svg">
Here's some optional content for browsers that don't support XHR or inline
SVGs. You can use other React components here too. Here, I'll show you.
<img src="/path/to/myfile.png" />
</Isvg>
Props
<ul>
<li><code>isHttpError</code></li>
<li><code>isSupportedBrowser</code></li>
<li><code>isConfigurationError</code></li>
<li><code>statusCode</code> (present only if <code>isHttpError</code> is true)</li>
</ul>
</td>
<code><Isvg uniquifyIDs={false}></Isvg></code>
</td>
Browser Support
Any browsers that support inlining SVGs and XHR will work. The component goes out of its way to handle IE9's weird XHR support so, IE9 and up get your SVG; lesser browsers get the fallback.
CORS
If loading SVGs from another domain, you'll need to make sure it allows CORS.
XSS Warning
This component places the loaded file into your DOM, so you need to be careful
about XSS attacks. Only load trusted content, and don't use unsanitized user
input to generate the src
!