I know some basics of CSS and HTML and sometimes work with them, but am not a professional, and I'm curious about how Bootstrap Glyphicons work. I mean there are no images in the Bootstrap zip file, so where do the images come from?
问题:
回答1:
In Bootstrap 2.x, Glyphicons used the image method - using images as you mentioned in your question.
The drawbacks with the image method was that:
- You couldn't change the color of the icons
- You couldn't change the background-color of the icons
- You couldn't increase the size of the icons
So instead of glyphicons in Bootstrap 2.x, a lot of people used Font-awesome, as this used SVG icons which did not have such limitations.
In Bootstrap 3.x, Glyphicons use the font method.
Using a font to represent an icon has advantages over using images:
- Scalable - works nicely regardless of client device's resolution
- Can change the colour with CSS
- Can do everything traditional icons can (e.g. change opacity, rotation, etc.)
- Can add strokes, gradients, shadows, and etc.
- Convert to text (with ligatures)
- Ligatures are read by screen readers
- Changing icons to fonts is as simple as changing the font-family in CSS
You can see what you can do with the font method for icons here.
So in the Bootstrap distribution, you can see the glyphicon font files:
fonts\glyphicons-halflings-regular.eot
fonts\glyphicons-halflings-regular.svg
fonts\glyphicons-halflings-regular.ttf
fonts\glyphicons-halflings-regular.woff
The Bootstrap CSS refers to the glyphicon font like so:
@font-face {
font-family: 'Glyphicons Halflings';
src: url('../fonts/glyphicons-halflings-regular.eot');
src: url('../fonts/glyphicons-halflings-regular.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'), url('../fonts/glyphicons-halflings-regular.woff') format('woff'), url('../fonts/glyphicons-halflings-regular.ttf') format('truetype'), url('../fonts/glyphicons-halflings-regular.svg#glyphicons_halflingsregular') format('svg');
}
And the CSS links to this font using the .glyphicon
base class (note the font-family
):
.glyphicon {
position: relative;
top: 1px;
display: inline-block;
font-family: 'Glyphicons Halflings';
font-style: normal;
font-weight: normal;
...
}
And then each glyphicon uses an individual icon class which refers to a Unicode reference within the Glyphicon Halflings font, e.g.:
.glyphicon-envelope:before {
content: "\2709";
}
This is why you must use the base .glyphicon
class as well as the individual icon class against the span
element in Bootstrap 3:
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-envelope"></span>