Awesome
Magical SVG 🪄
An all-in-one Vite plugin that magically makes working with SVGs and bundling them a breeze.
Can mostly be used as a drop-in replacement of SVGR and similar tools.
Backstory
Inspired by a tweet from Preact's creator Jason Miller, I've been looking at plugins that would let me work with SVGs, as I myself did the error of embedding SVGs as React components. Shame!
What I wanted was a plugin that would let me import SVGs, and make a sprite of symbols and give me the identifier I
can use in <use href='???'/>
. And I couldn't find any decent plugin that makes working with them easy. They all had
a problem that made using them a pain, or outright impractical. Here's a list of the problems I encountered:
- References in SVG files are never processed.
<image href='...'/>
would never get processed and the referenced asset is ignored. - The generated sprite include ALL icons, even unused ones. Just picking the right icons from a pack isn't an option.
- There are no options to output to a separate file and reference it. Inlining is apparently the only way.
- Selectively tell to not process a specific SVG isn't possible (e.g.: A logo, or SVGs that break when encapsulated in a symbol).
- You can't make different sprites, it's only all-in-one.
So I decided to make my own tool to solve all these problems. Introducing: the Magical SVG plugin. 🪄
Install
pnpm i vite-plugin-magical-svg
yarn add vite-plugin-magical-svg
npm i vite-plugin-magical-svg
Usage
Vite plugin setup
import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
import magicalSvg from 'vite-plugin-magical-svg'
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [
magicalSvg({
// By default, the output will be a dom element (the <svg> you can use inside the webpage).
// You can also change the output to react (or any supported target) to get a component you can use.
target: 'preact',
// By default, the svgs are optimized with svgo. You can disable this by setting this to false.
svgo: false,
// By default, width and height set on SVGs are not preserved.
// Set to true to preserve `width` and `height` on the generated SVG.
preserveWidthHeight: false,
// *Experimental* - set the width and height on generated SVGs.
// If used with `preserveWidthHeight`, will only apply to SVGs without a width/height.
setWidthHeight: { width: '24', height: '24' },
// *Experimental* - replace all instances of `fill="..."` and `stroke="..."`.
// Set to `true` for 'currentColor`, or use a text value to set it to this value.
// Disabled by default.
setFillStrokeColor: true,
// *Experimental* - if a SVG comes with `width` and `height` set but no `viewBox`,
// assume the viewbox is `0 0 {width} {height}` and add it to the SVG.
// Disabled by default.
restoreMissingViewBox: true,
})
]
})
Targets
dom
(default): exports a function you can call (takes no arguments) and returns a DOM element.react
: exports a functional React component (classic runtime; wrapped inforwardRef
)react-jsx
: exports a functional React component (automatic runtime; wrapped inforwardRef
)preact
: exports a functional Preact component (classic runtime; wrapped inforwardRef
)preact-jsx
: exports a functional Preact component (automatic runtime; wrapped inforwardRef
)vue
: exports a Vue component (as if it was a.vue
file)solid
: exports a Solid component
Use in code
import MySvg from './assets/icon.svg' // Basic import, as a sprite
import MySvg from './assets/icon.svg?sprite=owo' // Named sprites
import MySvg from './assets/icon.svg?sprite=inline' // Special sprite, inlined in the HTML document
import fileUrl from './assets/icon.svg?file' // Works like .png and other file imports
SVG processing
<svg viewBox='0 0 250 250'>
<image href='./assets/image.png' /> <!-- Image will be imported, bundled, and the href will be replaced -->
<image href='./assets/icon.svg' /> <!-- SVG will be imported as a file (implicit ?file) -->
<use href='./assets/icon.svg' /> <!-- SVG will be imported and added to the sprite -->
</svg>
exports
note
This plugin does not respect the exports
field when importing svg files from third-party packages such as
simple-icons
, which do not expose them.
Migrating from SVGR
This plugin can mostly be used as a drop-in replacement of SVGR; unless you're dealing with complex SVGs or need to style/animate individual parts of the SVG, the code generated by this plugin should behave just as you're used to, plus the preprocessing of your SVGs.
Make sure to enable preserveWidthHeight
for best compatibility. This option is not enabled by default as it was not
done historically by the plugin, and suddenly doing it would be a breaking change.