Skip to content

thomasjbradley/spritebot

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

84 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Spritebot

Your awkwardly ostentatious optimizing robot.

This application is essentially a GUI wrapper around SVGO, but without all the configuration of SVGOMG.

I was inspired to create it because my students needed a simpler SVG batch processing tool since SVG-GUI isn’t maintained any more.

The additional feature Spritebot brings, that isn’t available in the other tools, is the generation of SVG sprite sheets.

Built with Javascript, Node.js & Electron.


Download

Download the latest version of Spritebot below:


Using the sprite sheets

The sprite sheets that Spritebot creates will have <symbol> tags for each active SVG that’s been added into Spritebot.

If the SVGs are reverted to their original, unoptimized format they will not be included in the sprite sheet.

The id for each <symbol> will be the SVGs filename without the .svg extension.

Using an external SVG image file

Save the sprite sheet into your images folder. Then, in your HTML, you can use the SVG <use> statement to display a single sprite at a time:

<svg><use xlink:href="images/sprite-sheet.svg#icon-green" /></svg>

Using sprites pasted into HTML

You can paste the sprite sheet into your HTML file directly, then use the sprites from there.

I suggest hiding the <svg> tag with the hidden attribute, like so:

<svg hidden></svg>

Then further down, in your HTML you can use a single sprite with the <use> statement:

<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-green" /></svg>

More tutorials…

Check out the lessons & tutorials I use for my students for more details information.


License & copyright

© 2017 Thomas J Bradley — GPL.