Webpack loader for creating SVG sprites.
🎉 2.0 is out, please read the migration guide & overview.
⚠️ For old v0.x versions see the README in the v0 branch.
- Minimum initial configuration. Most of the options are configured automatically.
- Runtime for browser. Sprites are rendered and injected in pages automatically, you just refer to images via
<svg><use xlink:href="#id"></use></svg>
. - Isomorphic runtime for node/browser. Can render sprites on server or in browser manually.
- Customizable. Write/extend runtime module to implement custom sprite behaviour. Write/extend runtime generator to produce your own runtime, e.g. React component configured with imported symbol.
- External sprite file is generated for images imported from css/scss/sass/less/styl/html (SVG stacking technique).
npm install svg-sprite-loader -D
# via yarn
yarn add svg-sprite-loader -D
Example config
// webpack 1
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'svg-sprite-loader',
query: { ... }
}
// webpack 1 multiple loaders
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loaders: [
`svg-sprite-loader?${JSON.stringify({ ... })}`,
'svg-fill-loader',
'svgo-loader'
]
}
// webpack 2
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'svg-sprite-loader',
options: { ... }
}
// webpack 2 multiple loaders
{
test: /\.svg$/,
use: [
{ loader: 'svg-sprite-loader', options: { ... } },
'svg-fill-loader',
'svgo-loader'
]
}
How <symbol>
id
attribute should be named.
Complete list of supported patterns: loader-utils#interpolatename docs.
Passed to the symbolId interpolator to support the [N] pattern in the loader-utils name interpolator
Generated export format:
- when
true
loader will produceexport default ...
. - when
false
the result ismodule.exports = ...
.
By default depends on used webpack version: true
for webpack >= 2, false
otherwise.
When you require an image, loader transforms it to SVG <symbol>
, adds it to the special sprite storage and returns class instance
that represents symbol. It contains id
, viewBox
and content
fields and can later be used for referencing the sprite image, e.g:
import twitterLogo from './logos/twitter.svg';
// twitterLogo === SpriteSymbol<id: string, viewBox: string, content: string>
const rendered = `
<svg viewBox="${twitterLogo.viewBox}">
<use xlink:href="#${twitterLogo.id}" />
</svg>`;
When browser event DOMContentLoaded
is fired, sprite will be automatically rendered and injected in the document.body
.
If custom behaviour is needed (e.g. a different mounting target) default sprite module could be overridden via spriteModule
option. Check example below.
Path to sprite module that will be compiled and executed at runtime.
By default it depends on target
webpack config option:
svg-sprite-loader/runtime/browser-sprite.build
for 'web' target.svg-sprite-loader/runtime/sprite.build
for other targets.
If you need custom behavior, use this option to specify a path of your sprite implementation module.
Path will be resolved relative to the current webpack build folder, e.g. utils/sprite.js
placed in current project dir should be written as ./utils/sprite
.
Example of sprite with custom mounting target (copypasted from browser-sprite):
import BrowserSprite from 'svg-baker-runtime/src/browser-sprite';
import domready from 'domready';
const sprite = new BrowserSprite();
domready(() => sprite.mount('#my-custom-mounting-target'));
export default sprite; // don't forget to export!
It's highly recommended to extend default sprite classes:
Same as spriteModule
, but for sprite symbol. By default also depends on target
webpack config option:
svg-sprite-loader/runtime/browser-symbol.build
for 'web' target.svg-sprite-loader/runtime/symbol.build
for other targets.
runtimeGenerator
(default generator)
Path to node.js script that generates client runtime. Use this option if you need to produce your own runtime, e.g. React component configured with imported symbol. Example.
Should runtime be compatible with earlier v0.x loader versions. This option will be removed in the next major version release.
Arbitrary data passed to runtime generator. Reserved for future use when other runtime generators will be created.
In the extract mode loader should be configured with plugin, otherwise an error is thrown. Example:
// webpack.config.js
const SpriteLoaderPlugin = require('svg-sprite-loader/plugin');
...
{
plugins: [
new SpriteLoaderPlugin()
]
}
Switches loader to the extract mode. Enabled automatically for images imported from css/scss/sass/less/styl/html files.
Filename of extracted sprite. Multiple sprites can be generated by specifying different loader rules restricted with include
option.
In case of any conflicts loader will produce a warning:
module: {
rules: [
// images from img/flags goes to flags-sprite.svg
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'svg-sprite-loader',
include: path.resolve('./img/flags'),
options: {
extract: true,
spriteFilename: 'flags-sprite.svg'
}
},
// images from img/icons goes to icons-sprite.svg
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'svg-sprite-loader',
include: path.resolve('./img/icons'),
options: {
extract: true,
spriteFilename: 'icons-sprite.svg'
}
}
]
}
It is also possible to generate sprite for each chunk by using [chunkname]
pattern in spriteFilename option.
This is experimental feature, so use with caution!
See examples folder.
TODO
MIT
TODO