A Sanity plugin for selecting, managing, and customizing icons. Inspired by sanity-plugin-icon-picker.
Powered by Iconify
- ⚡️ Features
- 🔌 Installation
- 🧑💻 Usage
- ⚙️ Plugin Configuration
- 👀 Document List Preview
- 🧩 Add Icons to Portable Text
- 🎨 Custom Color Palette
- 🎭 Custom Diff View
- 🗂️ Collections Tab
- 🌎 Basic Hosting
- 🗃️ Data Model
- 🎬 How to render the icon on your website
- 🛣️ Roadmap
- 📝 License
-
🧪 Develop & test
- Sanity v3 plugin
- Customizable icons
- SVG code stored in Sanity
- Media preview component for your entry
- Download or copy to clipboard your icon
- Presence and Change Indicator preserved
- Custom Diff View
- Provide your own color palette for monochrome icons
- Basic API Hosting
- v1.1.0+: Search filter 'Collection'
- v1.2.0+: Collections tab
- v1.3.0+: Global 'inline-svg' option
- v1.4.0+: Limit Collections option
npm install sanity-plugin-icon-manager
Add it as a plugin in sanity.config.ts
(or .js):
import {defineConfig} from 'sanity'
import {IconManager} from 'sanity-plugin-icon-manager'
export default defineConfig({
//...
plugins: [
IconManager({
// your optional configuration here
}),
],
// ...
})
The plugin introduces one new object type called: icon.manager
. You can define a new field with this type inside your documents.
import {defineField, defineType} from 'sanity'
const SampleDocument = defineType({
type: 'document',
name: 'sampleDocument',
title: 'Sample Document',
fields: [
// ...
defineField({
type: 'icon.manager',
name: 'icon',
title: 'Icon',
}),
// ...
],
})
export default SampleDocument
This is the main configuration of the plugin. The available options are:
{
// An array of strings containing a subset of collection IDs (e.g., ['ant-design', 'material-']). This can be used when you want to limit access to only specific collections. It utilizes the 'prefixes' query parameter available on the Iconify API. More information can be found here (https://iconify.design/docs/api/collections.html).
availableCollections?: string[]
// When set to true, this global option allows you to automatically store the inline version of the selected icon. This means that the 'Inline Svg' checkbox will be preselected by default when you choose a new icon.
inlineSvg?: boolean
// This is the endpoint if you decide to host your icon sets on your own server. For more details, see the dedicated session below
customEndpoint?: string
// an optional array of custom color palette
customPalette?: [
{
hex: string, // the hex code of your custom color
title?: string // an optional title for you custom color used as a tooltip inside the color picker.
},
// other colors
]
}
The plugin provides a component that you can use as a media preview of your icon within your document list.
You can pass a second argument (a true
boolean value) to the function if you want to see always the original icon.
import {defineField, defineType} from 'sanity'
import {mediaPreview} from 'sanity-plugin-icon-manager'
const SampleDocument = defineType({
type: 'document',
name: 'sampleDocument',
title: 'Sample Document',
preview: {
select: {
// ...
icon: 'icon'
},
prepare({icon, ...rest}) {
return {
// ...rest
media: mediaPreview(icon)
}
}
}
fields: [
// ...
defineField({
type: 'icon.manager',
name: 'icon',
title: 'Icon',
}),
// ...
],
})
export default SampleDocument
You can easily use the plugin inside your Portable Text, both for inline or block components. The preview will shows the rendered icon and its related name.
import {defineField, defineType} from 'sanity'
const SampleDocument = defineType({
type: 'document',
name: 'sampleDocument',
title: 'Sample Document',
fields: [
// ...
defineField({
name: 'body',
type: 'array',
title: 'Body',
of: [
{
type: 'block',
of: [{type: 'icon.manager', title: 'Inline Icon'}],
},
{
type: 'icon.manager',
title: 'Block Icon',
},
],
}),
// ...
],
})
export default SampleDocument
You can pass a list of custom colors to fill your monochrome icons with your brand identity.
You need to provide a list of valid hex colors (with an optional title).
As a result, you will have access to these colors within the color picker when customizing a monochrome icon.
import {defineConfig} from 'sanity'
import {IconManager} from 'sanity-plugin-icon-manager'
export default defineConfig({
//...
plugins: [
IconManager({
customPalette: [
{
hex: '#AB87FF',
title: 'Tropical Indigo',
},
{
hex: '#B4E1FF',
title: 'Uranian Blue',
},
{
hex: '#F49E4C',
title: 'Sandy brown',
},
{
hex: '#2D728F',
title: 'Cerulean',
},
{
hex: '#C14953',
title: 'Bittersweet shimmer',
},
{
hex: '#AEA4BF',
title: 'Rose quartz',
},
{
hex: '#02C39A',
title: 'Mint',
},
],
}),
],
// ...
})
The plugin includes a custom diff component that allows you to view differences in a more human-readable way. You can have three different custom diff views:
In any of the above cases you can always see the list of all the changes clicking on the Show details
CTA.
Starting from v.1.2.0, you can browse icons through all available collections.
The search dialog now offers a 'Tabs view' where you can choose to search for your icons as before or via the new 'Collections' tab. Here, you can scroll through all the available collections, select one, and choose an icon from the available options within the selected collection.
The Iconify project allows you to host the API on your server. You can learn more about it in their official documentation.
This plugin offers a basic customization through the customEndpoint
option. If you pass a valid URL, hosting a custom Iconify implementation, the plugin will use it as the base path for all the interactions (searching and rendering).
import {defineConfig} from 'sanity'
import {IconManager} from 'sanity-plugin-icon-manager'
export default defineConfig({
//...
plugins: [
IconManager({
customEndpoint: 'https://my.iconify.project.com',
}),
],
// ...
})
{
_type: 'icon.manager',
icon: string
metadata: {
iconName: string
collectionId: string
collectionName: string
url: string
downloadUrl: string
inlineSvg: string
hFlip: boolean
vFlip: boolean
flip: 'horizontal' | 'vertical' | 'horizontal,vertical'
rotate: 0 | 1 | 2 | 3
size: {
width: number
height: number
}
color: {
hex: string
rgba: {
r: number
g: number
b: number
a: number
}
}
palette: boolean
author: {
name: string
url: string
},
license: {
name: string
url: string
}
}
}
Regardless of how you retrieve data from Sanity, you can render the icon in different ways.
You can use the inline option to render the SVG directly. Alternatively, Iconify provides various rendering possibilities:
Here an example with the React package:
// Let's assume that we have retrieved the following data from Sanity
{
icon: 'bi:check2-circle',
metadata: {
flip: 'horizontal',
size: {
width: 20,
height: 20,
},
rotate: 0,
color: {
hex: '#6aceeb'
}
}
}
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
import {Icon} from '@iconify/react'
const MyComponent = (props) => {
const {icon, metadata: {flip, rotate, size, color} } = props
return (
<Icon
icon={icon}
flip={flip}
rotate={rotate}
width={size.width}
height={size.height}
style={{color: color.hex}}
/>
)
}
-
Filter by Collection(v1.1.0+) -
Search within an entire collection(v1.2.0+) - Analyze the possibility of adding custom icon sets via configuration
- 🤔
MIT © William Iommi
This plugin uses @sanity/plugin-kit with default configuration for build & watch scripts.
See Testing a plugin in Sanity Studio on how to run this plugin with hotreload in the studio.
Run "CI & Release" workflow. Make sure to select the main branch and check "Release new version".
Semantic release will only release on configured branches, so it is safe to run release on any branch.