If you work with React, you know that the library enables you to manage and use your icons in a lot a ways. This is good because you have flexibility to manage them as you want. So, in many cases this workflow can become a manual and massive process that you need to do so many times.
Reicons is a simple CLI tool that helps you to manage and use your icons quickly and easily.
- Require your icons as a simple React component
- Customize your icons with just css or inline styles
- Resize them in a prop way
- No
.svg
,.png
or.jpg
inside your bundle
That's great no? See more information above about how to use!
The first thing that you need to do to use Reicons is install it globally or as a dependency at your project:
$ yarn [global] add reicons
After that you can see it working:
$ reicons --help
reicons -p [<package-dir:package-prefix>] -s <dir> -b <dir>
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
--packages, -p Your svg icons packages [array]
--src, -s Directory with the icons folder [string]
--build, -b Build directory [string]
--help Show help [boolean]
Let's use the default example folder as example. There's we have an images
folder that have two folders font-awesome and icons with a lot of svg files inside. So, we want to build our components at folder components/Icons
. To do that, we can run:
$ cd example/default
$ reicons -p font-awesome:fa icons:ic -s images -b components/Icons
After this command, Reicons will generate our components in a folder structure like that:
.
└── components
└── Icons
└── index.js
With that you can just import your icons as a simple React component:
import { FaBook } from './components/Icons';
const App = () => (
<div>
<FaBook />
</div>
);
or import the entiry bundled icons and define what you want passing a prop name
import Icon from './components/Icons';
const App = () => (
<div>
<Icon name="FaBook" />
</div>
);
You need to know just few things to use the tool. As you've seen above, Reicons need to read a list of svg icons and know where you want to bundle your components.
So, to bundle your icons you need to pass three arguments: --package
, --src
and --build
.
One or more packages that you will use as icons. This argument has a default style to write, because we need it to find and create your svg files.
The default style to write your package is: <package-directory>:<package-prefix>
The package-directory
is the folder name of your svg icons and the package-prefix
is the name that we will use to prefix your components.
The source directory when your packages folder is.
The build directory when you want to create your components.