Perfect for buttons, logos and nav/tab bars. Easy to extend, style and integrate into your project.
- You can use your own custom icon sets. Supports SVG via Fontello or regular icon fonts.
- You can use native
TabBarIOS
. - You can use icons inline with
Text
components as emojis or to create buttons. - You can use the icon as an image if a native component requires it (such as
NavigatorIOS
). - Most common use cases is JavaScript only and thus enables wider possibilities of styling (and is easier to integrate with your project).
- No need to define
width
andheight
styles. - Presentational stuff like size and color can be defined in your stylesheet instead of via a property (if you want to).
- Icons scale with accessibility settings (unless disabled).
Entypo
by Daniel Bruce (411 icons)EvilIcons
by Alexander Madyankin & Roman Shamin (v1.7.8, 70 icons)FontAwesome
by Dave Gandy (v4.5, 605 icons)Foundation
by ZURB, Inc. (v3.0, 283 icons)Ionicons
by Ben Sperry (v2.0.1, 733 icons)MaterialIcons
by Google, Inc. (v2.1.1, 893 icons)Octicons
by Github, Inc. (v2.4.1, 178 icons)Zocial
by Sam Collins (v1.0, 100 icons)
$ npm install react-native-vector-icons --save
if you're using rnpm, you can link all native dependencies automatically:
$ rnpm link
If you want to use any of the bundled icons, you need to add the icon fonts to your XCode project. Just follow these steps:
- Right click on you project in XCode and select Add files to "NameOfYourProject".
- Browse to
node_modules/react-native-vector-icons
and select the folderFonts
(or just the ones you want). Make sure your app is checked under "Add to targets" and that "Create groups" is checked if you add the whole folder. - Edit
Info.plist
and add a property called Fonts provided by application (if you haven't added one already) and type in the files you just added. It will look something like this:
Note: you need to recompile your project after adding new fonts, also ensure that they also appear under Copy Bundle Resources in Build Phases.
If you want to use the TabBar/NavigatorIOS integration or use getImageSource
, then you need to add RNVectorIcons.xcodeproj
to Libraries and add libRNVectorIcons.a
to Link Binary With Libraries under Build Phases. More info and screenshots about how to do this is available in the React Native documentation.
Option: With CocoaPods
Add the following to your Podfile
and run pod update
:
pod 'RNVectorIcons', :path => 'node_modules/react-native-vector-icons'
Edit Info.plist
as described above.
Note: Android support requires React Native 0.16 or later, use 0.8.5 for earlier versions
- Copy the contents in the
Fonts
folder toandroid/app/src/main/assets/fonts
(note lowercase font folder).
These steps are optional and only needed if you want to use the Icon.getImageSource
function.
-
Edit
android/settings.gradle
to look like this (without the +):rootProject.name = 'MyApp' include ':app' + include ':react-native-vector-icons' + project(':react-native-vector-icons').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-vector-icons/android')
-
Edit
android/app/build.gradle
(note: app folder) to look like this:apply plugin: 'com.android.application' android { ... } dependencies { compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar']) compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:23.0.0' compile 'com.facebook.react:react-native:0.16.+' + compile project(':react-native-vector-icons') }
-
Edit your
MainActivity.java
(deep inandroid/app/src/main/java/...
) to look like this (note two places to edit):package com.myapp; + import com.oblador.vectoricons.VectorIconsPackage; .... public class MainActivity extends Activity implements DefaultHardwareBackBtnHandler { private ReactInstanceManager mReactInstanceManager; private ReactRootView mReactRootView; @Override protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); mReactRootView = new ReactRootView(this); mReactInstanceManager = ReactInstanceManager.builder() .setApplication(getApplication()) .setBundleAssetName("index.android.bundle") .setJSMainModuleName("index.android") .addPackage(new MainReactPackage()) + .addPackage(new VectorIconsPackage()) .setUseDeveloperSupport(BuildConfig.DEBUG) .setInitialLifecycleState(LifecycleState.RESUMED) .build(); mReactRootView.startReactApplication(mReactInstanceManager, "MyApp", null); setContentView(mReactRootView); } ... }
You can either use one of the bundled icons above or roll your own custom font.
var Icon = require('react-native-vector-icons/FontAwesome');
var myIcon = (<Icon name="rocket" size={30} color="#900" />)
Any Text property and the following:
Prop | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
size |
Size of the icon, can also be passed as fontSize in the style object. |
12 |
name |
What icon to show, see Icon Explorer app or one of the links above. | None |
color |
Color of the icon. | Inherited |
Since Icon
builds on top of the Text
component, most style properties will work as expected, you might find it useful to play around with these:
backgroundColor
borderWidth
borderColor
borderRadius
padding
margin
color
fontSize
By combining some of these you can create for example:
A convenience component for creating buttons with an icon on the left side.
var Icon = require('react-native-vector-icons/FontAwesome')
var myButton = (
<Icon.Button name="facebook" backgroundColor="#3b5998" onPress={this.loginWithFacebook}>
Login with Facebook
</Icon.Button>
);
var customTextButton = (
<Icon.Button name="facebook" backgroundColor="#3b5998">
<Text style={{fontFamily: 'Arial', fontSize: 15}}>Login with Facebook</Text>
</Icon.Button>
);
Any Text
, TouchableHighlight
or TouchableWithoutFeedback
property in addition to these:
Prop | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
color |
Text and icon color, use iconStyle or nest a Text component if you need different colors. |
white |
size |
Icon size. | 20 |
iconStyle |
Styles applied to the icon only, good for setting margins or a different color. | {marginRight: 10} |
backgroundColor |
Background color of the button. | #007AFF |
borderRadius |
Border radius of the button, set to 0 to disable. |
5 |
onPress |
A function called when the button is pressed. | None |
Convenient way to plug this in into other components that rely on bitmap images rather than scalable vector icons. Takes the arguments name
, size
and color
as described above.
Icon.getImageSource('user', 20, 'red').then((source) => this.setState({ userIcon: source }));
For a complete example check out the TabBarExample
project.
Usage with TabBarIOS
Simply use Icon.TabBarItem
instead of TabBarIOS.Item
. This is an extended component that works exactly the same but with three additional properties:
Prop | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
iconName |
Name of the default icon (similar to TabBarIOS.Item icon ) |
None |
selectedIconName |
Name of the selected icon (similar to TabBarIOS.Item selectedIcon ). |
iconName |
iconSize |
Size of the icon. | 30 |
For example usage see Examples/TabBarExample
or the examples section below. Don't forget to import and link to this project as described above if you are going to use the TabBar integration.
Usage with NavigatorIOS
Use Icon.getImageSource
to get an image source object and pass it as you would with backButtonIcon
, leftButtonIcon
or rightButtonIcon
.
Note: Since NavigatorIOS
doesn't rerender with new state and the async nature of getImageSource
you must not use it with initialRoute
until the icon is rendered, but any view added by push
should be fine. Easiest way is to simple add an if
statment at the beginning of you render method like this:
render: function() {
if(!this.state.myIcon) {
return false;
}
return (<NavigatorIOS ... />);
}
Development belongs to open-source community - not used by the React Native team on their apps. A result of this is that there is currently a backlog of unresolved bugs, nobody who uses this has stepped up to take ownership for it yet.
You are probably better off with Navigator.NavigationBar
or react-native-navbar
.
Returns your own custom font based on the glyphMap
where the key is the icon name and the value is either a UTF-8 character or it's character code. fontFamily
is the name of the font NOT the filename. Open the font in Font Book.app or similar to learn the name. Optionally pass the third fontFile
argument for android support, it should be a path to the font file in you asset folder.
var { createIconSet } = require('react-native-vector-icons');
var glyphMap = { 'icon-name': 1234, test: '∆' };
var Icon = createIconSet(glyphMap, 'FontName');
Convenience method to create a custom font based on a fontello config file. Don't forget to import the font as described above and drop the config.json
somewhere convenient in your project.
var { createIconSetFromFontello } = require('react-native-vector-icons');
var fontelloConfig = require('./config.json');
var Icon = createIconSetFromFontello(fontelloConfig);
Try the IconExplorer
project in Examples/IconExplorer
folder, there you can also search for any icon.
var React = require('react-native');
var Icon = require('react-native-vector-icons/Ionicons');
var ExampleView = React.createClass({
render: function() {
return <Icon name="person" size={30} color="#4F8EF7" />;
}
};
Full example in TabBarExample
project in Examples/TabBarExample
folder.
var React = require('react-native');
var {
View,
Text,
TabBarIOS,
} = React;
var Icon = require('react-native-vector-icons/Ionicons');
var TabBarView = React.createClass({
render: function() {
return (
<TabBarIOS>
<Icon.TabBarItem
title="Home"
iconName="ios-home-outline"
selectedIconName="ios-home"
}}>
<View style={styles.tabContent}><Text>Home Tab</Text></View>
</Icon.TabBarItem>
</TabBarIOS>
);
}
};
var React = require('react-native');
var Icon = require('react-native-vector-icons/Ionicons');
var ExampleView = React.createClass({
render: function() {
return (<Text>Lorem <Icon name="ios-book" color="#4F8EF7" /> Ipsum</Text>);
}
};
If you already have a icon font with associated CSS file then you can easily generate a icon set with the generate-icon
script.
./node_modules/.bin/generate-icon path/to/styles.css --componentName=MyIcon --fontFamily=myicon > Components/MyIcon.js
Any flags not listed below, like --componentName
and --fontFamily
, will be passed on to the template.
CSS selector prefix [default: ".icon-"]
Template in lodash format [default: "./template/iconSet.tpl"]
For default template please provide --componentName
and --fontFamily
.
Save output to file, defaults to STDOUT
- Make sure you've copied the font to
android/app/src/main/assets/fonts
. - Delete the
android/app/build
folder. - Recompile the project.
- Make sure you've added the fonts to your XCode project.
- Check that the font you are trying to use appears in
Info.plist
, if you've added the whole folder and it's blue in color, then you need to add it to the path. - Check that the font is copied in the Copy Bundle Resources in Build Phases.
- Recompile the project.
This project is licenced under the MIT License.
Any bundled fonts are copyright to their respective authors and mostly under MIT or SIL OFL.