The Badging API is a new web platform API that allows installed web apps to set an application-wide badge, shown in an operating-system-specific place associated with the application (such as the shelf or home screen). The Badging API works on Windows, and macOS, in Chrome 81 or later. It has also been confirmed to work on Edge 84 or later. Support for Chrome OS is in development and will be available in a future release of Chrome. On Android, the Badging API is not supported. Instead, Android automatically shows a badge on app icon for the installed web app when there is an unread notification, just as for Android apps. Since this API is not available everywhere, badgin
safely falls back to alternatives.
Currently, the native badge is only displayed if you install the web application to your home screen (view prerequisites). The screenshot shows the application in the dock of macOS.
If the native badge is not available, the favicon will be used and a small badge will be added.
If the favicon is not available, the badge will be added as a prefix to the title.
You can find a demo at https://jaulz.github.io/badgin/ where you can see the different options. If you want to see the native badge, you need to install the app to your home screen (check out the plus icon in the address bar).
The module can be installed by running:
yarn add --save badgin
Just use the library as following:
import badgin from 'badgin'
badgin.set(1) // set value
badgin.set() // set indicator only
badgin.clear()
The following options can be used:
{
method: 'Badging' | 'Favicon' | 'Title'
favicon: {
backgroundColor: string = '#424242'
color: string = '#ffffff'
indicator: string = '!'
radius: number = 3
size: number = 7
horizontalMargin: number = 0
verticalMargin: number = 0
horizontalPadding: number = 1
verticalPadding: number = 1
}
title: {
indicator: string = '!'
}
}
And you can use it like this:
badgin.set(1, {
favicon: {
width: 9,
background: '#549A2F',
},
})
MIT
This is a refactored fork of the original Tinycon library, Tinycon is released under the MIT license. Tinycon was inspired by Notificon.