Font Awesome
The official way to use Font Awesome Free or Pro icons on your WordPress site, brought to you by the Font Awesome team. Features Our official plugin makes it easy to add Font Awesome icons to your pages, posts, and templates and includes the following features: Use Pro or Free icons, from the latest release or a specific release. Use custom icons from your Pro Kits. Use a Font Awesome Kit to add any of our icons (including the latest Duotone styles and custom icons!), or select the Font Awesome CDN for Version 5 icons only. Turn on automatic compatibility for Font Awesome Version 4 if you – or your plugins – are still using Version 4 syntax. Troubleshoot and resolve issues when multiple versions of Font Awesome are loading on your site from other plugins/themes, which can cause unexpected icon display or technical issues. How to Use Install And Enable The Plugin (See the Installation tab for details) How to Add and Style Icons Full docs on how to use the plugin and add icons are available on the Font Awesome Docs site. Add Icons in the Block Editor Once you’ve set up your plugin, you can add icons as blocks or inline with text. To add icons as blocks, select the “Font Awesome Icon” block, and then click the “Choose Icon button” to open the Icon Chooser. To add icons inline, select the Font Awesome option in the format toolbar to open the Icon Chooser. (Note: Inline icons require at least WP 6.3.) Once you open the Icon Chooser, add icons by: Searching for the icon you want – you can search by icon name, category, or keyword. Changing the Family and Style using the drop downs if you want an icon in a different style. When you see the icon you want, clicking it to enter it into the content of your page or post. Note: If you want to search and add Pro icons in the Icon Chooser, make sure you set your plugin to use a Pro Kit. Add Icons in The Classic Editor If you need to add icons in the classic editor, you can use the icon names in shortcodes or HTML. Add an icon using shortcodes to any text area – just add the name of the icon and a style prefix, where the prefix is the style of icon you want to use. Note that you don’t need to include the fa- part of the icon name. And if you don’t include any style prefix, the icon will default to the Classic Solid style. The shortcode for an icon looks like this: [icon name="stroopwafel"] [icon name="stroopwafel" prefix="fa-sharp fa-light"] You can also use basic HTML with standard Font Awesome syntax, like this: Using Pro Icons and Features To use a Kit to power your icons, create a Kit on FontAwesome.com and select “Pro icons” in the Kit Settings tab. Then grab your API Token from your Font Awesome Account page and add it to your WordPress plugin settings. To use the CDN to power your icons, know that you will only be able to use icons from Version 5. To enable Pro icons, add your site’s domain to the list allowed domains on your Font Awesome CDN Settings page and then use shortcodes or HTML to add the icons into your content. Troubleshooting with the Plugin Font Awesome icons are popular, so lots of themes and plugins also load Font Awesome, and sometimes their version can conflict with yours. So we created a way to help you find and prevent those conflicting versions from affecting your icons: The Conflict Detection Scanner. If the plugin seems to be set up correctly and your icons still aren’t loading and you’re not sure why, head over to the Troubleshoot tab, which has two parts: Detect Conflicts with Other Versions of Font Awesome – which lets you start the conflict detection scanner to find versions of Font Awesome loading on your site. Versions of Font Awesome Active on Your Site – which shows the results of the scanner and lets you prevent any conflicting versions from loading other versions of Font Awesome on your site. Get more information about using the scanner for troubleshooting on the Font Awesome WordPress docs. Configuring The plugin is set to serve Font Awesome Free icons as a Web Font via the Font Awesome CDN by default. You can change the CDN settings right in the plugin. If you want just the basic Free icons, you probably don’t need to make any changes to the default configuration. You can get more information about all the available settings and troubleshooting on the Font Awesome WordPress docs. Upgrading from Plugin Version 4 [icon] shortcodes found in Block Editor content and elsewehre will continue to work as before, though new icons added with the Icon Chooser in the Block Editor will be inline SVGs. Previously added [icon] shortcodes will not be automatically be converted into the new inline SVG format. If you want to convert an [icon] shortcode, delete it and re-add the icon using the Icon Chooser in the Block Editor. See Also The README on GitHub has details for WordPress site owners and developers. You can get more information about all the available settings and troubleshooting on the Font Awesome WordPress docs. And there are API docs for developers.
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SVG Block
This SVG block allows you to display SVG images as inline HTML markup. You can either choose an icon from the icon library with more than 3000 icons or you can upload or input your custom SVG images directly in the block’s setting. It also allows you to upload SVG images to the WordPress media library, and load them into the icon library. Only SVG files that have XML declaration at the top like can be uploaded to the WordPress media library. Key Features Accessibility ready with ‘img’ role, automatically generates title and description from settings. Automatically sanitize SVG markup to make it safe and lightweight. Include almost all settings to customize the SVG image. Include a collection of common non-rectangular dividers. An icon library included icons from “Bootstrap Icons”, “Ionicons”, “Dashicons” and new “WordPress Icons”. Allow uploading SVG images to the WordPress media library Automatically load SVG images from the media library into the icon library Video tutorials How to create an icon with custom styles using the icon library: How to create a non-rectangular background section: How to create icon buttons: Please take a look at these custom block patterns that use this block to see how it can be applied to real-world sites. If this plugin is useful for you, please do a quick review and rate it on WordPress.org to help us spread the word. I would very much appreciate it. Please check out my other plugins if you’re interested: Content Blocks Builder – This plugin turns the Block Editor into a powerful page builder by allowing you to create blocks, variations, and patterns directly in the Block Editor without needing a code editor. Meta Field Block – A block to display custom fields as blocks on the front end. It supports custom fields for posts, terms, users, and setting fields. It can also be used in the Query Loop block. Icon separator – A tiny block just like the core/separator block but with the ability to add an icon. Breadcrumb Block – A simple breadcrumb trail block that supports JSON-LD structured data and is compatible with WooCommerce. Block Enhancements – Adds practical features to blocks like icons, box shadows, transforms, etc. Counting Number Block – A block to display numbers with a counting effect Better YouTube Embed Block – A block to solve the performance issue with embedded YouTube videos. It can also embed multiple videos and playlists. The plugin is developed using @wordpress/create-block.
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