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CI

Important

Material Icons Laravel Bridge has been deprecated with 2.1.0 as the last release. There are a number of alternatives based on Blade Icons (Blade UI Kit). Thank you for the support and contributions over the years. The repository will remain open and archived.

Material Icons Laravel Bridge

Easily use Google Material Design SVG icons in Laravel Blade templates.

For a full list of available icons see the SVG directories.

Requirements

Using version 1.x? Check the upgrade guide.

Installation

You can install this package via Composer by running this command in your terminal in the root of your project:

composer require avvertix/materialicons-laravel-bridge

The service provider MaterialIcons\MaterialIconsBridgeServiceProvider::class is automatically registered as part of the Laravel service discovery

Configuration

By default the class icon is added to the svg tag when inserted into a page. You can change this behavior by overriding the configuration using the config/materialiconset.php file.

A ready to use configuration file can be inserted in your config directory using php artisan vendor:publish --provider="MaterialIcons\MaterialIconsBridgeServiceProvider"

You can specify any default CSS classes you'd like to be applied to your icons using the class option:

<?php

return [
    // ...
    'class' => 'icon', // Add the `icon` class to every SVG icon when rendered
    // ...
];

You can specify multiple classes by separating them with a space, just like you would in an HTML class attribute.

Usage

Blade directive

To insert an icon in your template use the @materialicon directive, passing the name of the material icon set, the name of the icon and optionally any additional classes:

<a href="/settings">
    @materialicon('action', 'settings', 'icon-lg') Settings
</a>

To add additional attributes to the rendered SVG tag, pass an associative array as the third parameter:

<a href="/settings">
    @materialicon('action', 'settings', 'icon-lg', ['alt' => 'Gear icon']) Settings
</a>

If you'd like, you can use the materialicon helper directly. The helper exposes a fluent syntax for setting icon attributes:

<a href="/settings">
    {{ materialicon('actions', 'settings')->alt('Alt text')->dataFoo('bar')->dataBaz() }} Settings
</a>

Blade components

All icons are available as Blade components, thanks to Blade Icons

<x-materialicon_toggle-ic_star_half_24px />

The component name format is: package name materialicon, the set within the package toggle and the file name ic_star_half_24px.

You can also pass classes to your icon components:

<x-materialicon_toggle-ic_star_half_24px class="icon-lg"/>

Or any other attributes for that matter:

<x-materialicon_toggle-ic_star_half_24px class="icon-lg" id="settings-icon" style="color: #555" data-baz/>

Helper

If you'd like, you can use the materialicon helper to expose a fluent syntax for setting SVG attributes:

{{ materialicon('toggle', 'star_half')->id('star-icon')->dataFoo('bar')->dataBaz() }}

Use another icon set

Even if this package makes easy to use Google's Material Design icons, it is not limited to that iconset.

You can still use a different iconset as behind the scenes the blade-ui-kit/blade-icons package is used.

Please check Blade Icon's documentation for all the configuration options and how to insert icons within your Blade views.

Upgrade

Upgrading from an older version? Check the upgrade guide.

Credits

  • The icons comes from the Google Material Design Icons package;
  • The package functionality was originally created on top of the great Blade SVG package by Adam Wathan now handed to Dries Vints as blade-ui-kit/blade-icons.