This is a small library which downloads Streamline assets you have access to into your local folder so that they can be used in your Javascript project. This is the only package you need to use Streamline assets, so please uninstall any old Streamline wrapper or private packages if you had them.
It works with any framework or library. You just need NPM and a build system like Webpack which will handle .svg
files.
Check an example app in the docs/latest
folder.
Warning, wrapper packages for React, Angular and Vue are deprecated and will be removed on June 1st 2021. Please use this new package instead, it provides a much better user experience.
- Ensure that you have an active Streamline subscription.
- Fill your project's private
.env
file withSTREAMLINE_FAMILIES
andSTREAMLINE_SECRET
variables. Check.env.example
file indocs/latest/example-app
for an example.
STREAMLINE_FAMILIES
: an array of strings with names of Streamline icons or illustrations families you own and which you want to include in your project. You can take the name from its url in Streamline. Eg a name of Brooklyn Illustrations from page https://app.streamlinehq.com/illustrations-brooklyn isillustrations-brooklyn
.STREAMLINE_SECRET
: your private npm token which is taken from Streamline developer page. Don't share this with anybody and keep it out of any public repos.
- Install the package in your project
npm install @streamlinehq/streamlinehq
.
It will execute the postinstall
script which will fetch the graphical assets. The requested images in a form of SVG files will be put in the package's img
folder. After this you will be able to import those images as usual in your project, eg:
// This is just an svg file. You can then use it in your <img> tag.
import checkCircle1 from '@streamlinehq/streamlinehq/img/streamline-bold/check-circle-1-jUA7gT.svg'
Each image has a certain immutable import path which consists of a human-readable part (eg check-circle-1
) and a short hash (eg jUA7gT
). It will never change so it's safe to use.
- Go to Streamline website
- Select a family you're interested in
- Select an icon you're interested in and see the import path in the sidebar:
Another option is to use an IDE which suggests you to autocomplete a path to an image:
Streamline images are just .svg
files. As a rule of thumb you should either render them as images and change the styles of the <img>
tag, either inline render them as svg and change styles with css. Check out an example app's code to see more options.
Please note that your project's build system must know how to handle .svg
files. For instance, create-react-app
does that out of the box.
You can set STREAMLINE_FAMILIES
and STREAMLINE_SECRET
variables in your shell so that the script can take them from process.env
.
Alternatively you can use streamlinehq.json
secret file. Please check 1.0.4 README for how to do that.
In 80% of the cases you need to ensure that you have set up your env vars properly in your project and reinstall this package by removing it completely and then installing it again, eg with rm -rf node_modules && npm i
.
Ensure that you have an active subscription for the Streamline family you want to download images from. Eg an error "You can not download XXX family in SVG" means that you don't have an active license for a XXX family. Please contact the Streamline team on support@webalys.com if you have purchased the valid license, and it still doesn't let you download the family's images.
Before installing this package you need to have any previous Streamline configuration removed. If you had private Streamline packages installed you have most likely configured your npm/yarn to pass an npm token to Cloudsmith. This configuration isn't needed anymore, and it can prevent this package from being installed. Remove (or temporarily rename) your .npmrc
file in your project and remove any Streamline configuration lines you might have added to yarn/npm config.
Make sure that you're using the package's latest version.
Note that because of fetching images installation might take longer than usual.
Before opening an issue double check that images have been installed in your node_modules/@streamlinehq/streamlinehq/img
folder. If not - try reinstalling on a better internet connection or checking the error message.
Before opening an issue ensure that your project can build and render any other .svg
files.
Please check the issues list: maybe it has an answer for you. If there is none please open a new issue and describe the problem, we will respond shortly.
Click to expand
Pull requests and any suggestions are welcome!
- Fork a project, clone it (as of now it will not fetch the images as there is no
.env
file in the parent folder, feel free to ignore the error). Work on new features or fixes in a separate branch. - Run
npm run dev
to compile a project on any code change. - Use an example app in
docs/latest/example-app
folder to experiment with this package. Alter it so it uses a local version of the@stremlinehq/streamlinehq
package. Read its README for more instructions. - Once done, open a pull request against
master
and wait for a review.
Click to expand
Once changes are made, do the following:
- Increment a version in
package.json
- Run
npm run build
to create a new build - Run
npm publish --access public
- Change the example app code in the next pull request to use the latest version of this package. Increment its version too.