This is Castor addition providing a collection of selected Boxicons and custom icons.
Install package:
npm install @onfido/castor-icons
Then make icons available by following either plain/bundled code approach, or by using React components.
When referring to a fragment identifier for an icon to be used, a link is made to icons.svg
sprite through the <use>
element. The sprite must be public, copy it from svg
directory of this package, or configure the bundler to do so.
Straight after this you can easily add an icon to your HTML code, e.g. "passport" if copied to same .castor-icons
directory:
<svg fill="currentColor" focusable="false" height="24" width="24">
<use href="/.castor-icons/icons.svg#passport"></use>
</svg>
Import sprite source to be used when referring to a fragment identifier for icon in JavaScript, like such:
import icons from '@onfido/castor-icons/svg/icons.svg';
document.body.innerHTML = `
<svg fill="currentColor" focusable="false" height="24" width="24">
<use href="${icons}#passport"></use>
</svg>
`;
Your bundler must handle the icons.svg
sprite asset for it to be available to public. For example, Parcel will do this for you automatically, but if you're using webpack then you should add and configure an additional loader like file-loader to handle svg file type.
Every SVG icon is also exported as React component, e.g. "passport":
import { IconPassport } from '@onfido/castor-icons';
import React, { Fragment } from 'react';
const Component = () => (
<Fragment>
<IconPassport />
{/* ...anything else e.g. text */}
</Fragment>
);
You may modify SVG appearance by passing component props such as "fill" for changing color (defaults to "currentColor"), or sizing with "height" and "width".
But if you prefer to use a sprite, feel free to (only once) inline it in your app using the Icons
component:
import { Icons } from '@onfido/castor-icons';
import React, { Fragment } from 'react';
const App = () => (
<Fragment>
<Icons />
{/* ...anything else e.g. app routes */}
</Fragment>
);
Then refer to a fragment identifier directly without setting any sprite source, like this:
const IconPassport = () => (
<svg fill="currentColor" focusable="false" height="24" width="24">
<use href="#passport"></use>
</svg>
);
The nature of an <svg>
element does not allow to embed individual icons, unfortunately.
To use individual SVGs (also distributed within this package) one possible solution is to use CSS Masks, e.g. for "passport" icon:
.icon-passport {
display: inline-block;
height: 24px;
width: 24px;
mask: url('~@onfido/castor-icons/svg/icon-passport.svg') no-repeat;
mask-size: 100%;
background-color: currentColor;
}
Then you're able to use such directly in your HTML:
<i class="icon-passport"></i>
Please keep in mind that the browser support is somewhat limited.
-
Focus handling is broken in IE and Edge browsers. When embedding via an
<svg>
element, we recommend to setfocusable="false"
. -
Be mindful of screen readers by applying the appropriate
aria-
attributes depending on each icon context and intent, for examplearia-hidden
oraria-label
.