Software Engineer and author (Node.js Web Development and more) passionate about Node.js, climate change, EV’s, and clean energy. https://sourcerer.io/robogeek

The Font Awesome icon collection is, well, awesome — nearly 4,000 icons that are incredibly easy to use, about 1,300 of which are open source and free to use in any application. As a budding Vue.js programmer, this library seemed like an excellent way to spiff up the application I’m developing.

While the Font Awesome team provides good integration with Vue.js, the instructions were lacking on specifically how to use the library. That led to a few hours of spinning my wheels getting it to work and discovering several ways to use the Font Awesome icons.

In this article, we’ll go over the methods for using Font Awesome icons in a Vue.js application, contrasting between them, and then go over a couple Vue-specific methodologies for using icons.

Getting started

When developing a Vue.js application, we’re most likely assembling components using npm (the de facto package manager for Node.js) and using webpack to assemble the application.

A GitHub repository containing the code discussed in this article is available here.

As a Vue.js programmer, you probably have Node.js and npm installed. If you don’t, head here for an installable package.

Next, we install the Vue.js CLI tool because it can provide scaffold applications for us to play with. Installation instructions are available on its website.

npm install -g @vue/cli # OR yarn global add @vue/cli

Once that’s installed you can type vue --version to verify its existence.

Next, we initialize a demo application that’s built using Webpack:

$ vue init webpack-simple 001-start ? Project name vuejs-fontawesome-get-started ? Project description Vue.js Fontawesome Getting Started ? Author David Herron <david@davidherron.com> ? License MIT ? Use sass? No vue-cli · Generated “001-start”. To get started: cd 001-start npm install npm run dev

If you like, you can follow the instructions printed by the tool. Before we do, let’s turn our attention to the Font Awesome instructions for Vue.js integration.

npm install --save @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core npm install --save @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons npm install --save @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome

We are advised to install these packages from npm, so let’s do so then run the recommended steps. We’ll see the blank Vue.js demo application. But we want to perform the surgery recommended in the Font Awesome documentation.

You can try this on your own, or browse an interactive demo:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

In the generated source, first change main.js to this:

import Vue from 'vue' import App from './App.vue' import { library } from '@fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core' import { faCoffee } from '@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons' import { FontAwesomeIcon } from '@fortawesome/vue-fontawesome' library.add(faCoffee) Vue.component('font-awesome-icon', FontAwesomeIcon) Vue.config.productionTip = false new Vue({ el: '#app', render: h => h(App) })

This gets the library object and loads one of the icons from the free-solid-svg-icons package. That icon is later added to the library . Next, we load FontAwesomeIcon , which is the Vue.js component, and register it with Vue.js as a global component. Finally, we set up the application to render.

Now we need to turn to App.vue , which we replace with the following:

<template> <div id="app"> <h1>Getting Started with Vue.js and Font Awesome</h1> <p>Have a cup of coffee: <font-awesome-icon icon="coffee" /></p> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App' } </script> <style> </style>

This is what Vue.js calls a single-file template. It contains the template, JavaScript, and CSS all in one convenient file. It’s a cool idea, and its implementation is buried in the webpack configuration you’ll see in the directory. We don’t need to investigate the webpack configuration, it’ll be enough to simply use it.

Now when we run npm run dev , the web browser will automatically load this page:

That’s cool — we have this nifty custom HTML tag we can easily use to load in icons. Great. If you glance through the Font Awesome documentation, you’ll see it’s possible to layer icons and add various effects like rotations. It promises to be fun.

Showing the JavaScript or Vue.js brand icon

The Font Awesome project includes many “brand” icons for things like JavaScript and Vue.js.

When we created the demo application, it was stored in a directory named 001-start . Duplicate that directory, calling the new one 002-brands . Or you can view the interactive demo:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

In App.vue in the new directory, change the template to:

<template> <div id="app"> <h1>Using Font Awesome "Brand" icons in Vue.js</h1> <p>Have a cup of coffee: <font-awesome-icon icon="coffee" /></p> <p>Have a module of JavaScript: <font-awesome-icon icon="js" /></p> <p>Have a module of Vue.js: <font-awesome-icon icon="vuejs" /></p> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App' } </script> <style> </style>

The second is an attempt to load the JavaScript icon. The Font Awesome website provides a search function. Enter “javascript” and you’ll find js is the code for the JavaScript icon, and likewise, the Vue.js icon has the code vuejs .

Now run this application with npm run dev , and you’ll see the icons are not there. In the browser JavaScript console, you’ll see an error that the icon was not found. In other words, it’s not all groovy, because we now have to learn a few things.

The first step is to look in the distribution directory:

$ ls node_modules/@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons/

This shows a long list of files with names like faCoffee.js . Take a look inside that file and you’ll find a bunch of data, including a string constant named svgPathData , which is clearly meant to drive generation of SVG. We don’t need to worry about the details, just know that it’s here.

The important thing is that none of those files contain a JavaScript or Vue.js icon.

The Font Awesome icon library is not one library, but instead four libraries — and we have only loaded one of the libraries. The total set are:

Solid

Regular

Light (no corresponding npm package)

Brands

Next, if we study the Icon browser, we see in the sidebar some checkboxes corresponding to those four groups. Try clicking the Free choice first, then clicking on the four groups, and you’ll see the Icon browser shows different subsets corresponding to the choices.

Because the JavaScript and Vue.js icons are in the Brands section, verifiable using the Icon browser, we need to load that package:

$ npm install — save @fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons

This suggests that main.js should be changed as so:

import { library } from ‘@fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core’; import { faCoffee } from ‘@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons’; import { faJs, faVuejs } from ‘@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons’; import { FontAwesomeIcon } from ‘@fortawesome/vue-fontawesome’; library.add(faCoffee, faJs, faVuejs);

But this does not help resolve the error message in the browser console.

Before we describe the solution to this problem, let’s go over the other ways to use Font Awesome icons.

Font Awesome CSS

I suggested creating a directory named 002-brands for the code in the previous section. Duplicate that directory to create 003-css and make a few modifications. Or you can use the online demo:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

Otherwise, type this command:

npm remove -S @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core @fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome npm install

This removes the Vue.js support we just worked with.

Edit main.js like so:

import Vue from 'vue'; import App from './App.vue'; Vue.config.productionTip = false; new Vue({ el: '#app', render: h => h(App) });

Then, in App.vue , change the template section as follows:

<template> <div id="app"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.2.0/css/all.css" integrity="sha384-hWVjflwFxL6sNzntih27bfxkr27PmbbK/iSvJ+a4+0owXq79v+lsFkW54bOGbiDQ" crossorigin="anonymous"> <h1>Using Font Awesome "Brand" icons in Vue.js</h1> <p>Have a cup of coffee: <i class="fas fa-coffee"></i> </p> <p>Have a module of JavaScript: <i class="fab fa-js"></i> </p> <p>Have a module of Vue.js: <i class="fab fa-vuejs"></i> </p> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App' } </script> <style> </style>

This comes from two pages:

Basic Use: Covers use of the <i> element as shown here Start: Gives us the <link> element shown here

The <link> , of course, belongs in the <head> section of your HTML. This particular CSS uses icon fonts for all four of the Font Awesome libraries shown earlier.

Notice that for the coffee icon, the fas class is used, while for the js and vuejs icons, the fab class is used. That’s a side effect of those two being in the Brands library versus the Solid library.

When used this way, displaying a Font Awesome icon uses the <i> tag as shown here. The Font Awesome documentation focuses on using this tag. Therefore, as a Vue.js programmer, you’ll have to become adept at switching between their documentation and using the provided Vue.js component ( <font-awesome-icon> ).

For this example, we completely disposed of the Vue.js support. It means we have one large CSS file containing the entire collection icons. The trade-off is that it’s very convenient to have the entire Font Awesome library available with just one <link> element.

By loading every icon, the downside is memory footprint. Our application is not going to use the entire library; it’s more likely to use only a handful, so why should the browser be given the entire library?

By contrast, the packaging scripts used in the previous example ensures packaging only the required code and nothing more. Impact on the browser is kept small using the previous method at the cost of writing a little bit more code.

But, hey, it works. Sometimes working code trumps architectural purity.

The fontawesome-free package

The fontawesome-free package includes the same files Font Awesome hosts on their CDN.

First, duplicate the 003-css working directory to create a new one, 004-fontawesome-free . If you wish to try the online demo, see below, but be warned that it does not work correctly — you’ll need to perform this step on your laptop.

Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

In that directory, install the package like so:

$ npm install @fortawesome/fontawesome-free — save

Check the installed package:

$ ls node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free

And you’ll find several directories

/js : All JavaScript files associated with Font Awesome 5 SVG with JS

: All JavaScript files associated with Font Awesome 5 SVG with JS /css : All CSS using the classic Web Fonts with CSS implementation

: All CSS using the classic Web Fonts with CSS implementation /sprites : SVG icons packaged in a convenient sprite

: SVG icons packaged in a convenient sprite /scss and /less : CSS preprocessor files for Web Fonts with CSS

and : CSS preprocessor files for Web Fonts with CSS /webfonts : Accompanying files for web fonts with CSS

: Accompanying files for web fonts with CSS /svg : Individual icon files in SVG format

Then, in App.vue , change the <link> element to this:

<template> <div id="app"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/css/all.css"> <h1>Using Font Awesome "Brand" icons in Vue.js</h1> <p>Have a cup of coffee: <i class="fas fa-coffee"></i> </p> <p>Have a module of JavaScript: <i class="fab fa-js"></i> </p> <p>Have a module of Vue.js: <i class="fab fa-vuejs"></i> </p> <h1>Using Font Awesome by referencing SVG files</h1> <p>Have a cup of coffee: <svg> <use xlink:href="node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/sprites/solid.svg#coffee"></use> </svg> </p> <p>Have a module of JavaScript: <svg> <use xlink:href="node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/sprites/brands.svg#js"></use> </svg></p> <p>Have a module of Vue.js: <svg> <use xlink:href="node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-free/sprites/brands.svg#vuejs"></use> </svg></p> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App' } </script> <style> </style>

With no more changes, the icons all appear as before. This is as expected, because all we’ve done is load the same file but from the local assets.

An alternative method is using the SVG sprites in the package. Another section has been added in this template to reference the raw SVG files.

This works, and obviously requires a little more work to get the sizing correct.

Getting back to Vue.js and Font Awesome

A couple sections back, we left off with an unanswered problem: How to use the JavaScript or Vue.js or other icons from the Font Awesome brands library in a Vue.js application?

If we duplicate the 002-brands directory to 005-brands-2 , we can start from where we left off. There is also an online demo at:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started Vue.js + Font Awesome #1 — Getting started by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

The detour through other aspects of Font Awesome taught us a few details we can now bring to bear on that question.

What we’ve learned is the JavaScript and Vue.js icons are in the Brands library. When using the <i> element methodology, we are supposed to use these patterns:

Solid icons have prefix fas and use <i class=”fas fa-flag”>

and use Regular icons have prefix far and use <i class=”far fa-flag”>

and use Light icons have prefix fal and use <i class=”fal fa-flag”>

and use Brands icons have prefix fab and use <i class=”fab fa-font-awesome”>

The standing problem is that Brands icons do not show up, and we see here one is supposed to use a prefix fab for Brands icons.

The npm package has additional useful documentation that is so useful one wonders why this is not on the Font Awesome website. There is a lot here we’ll explore in due time. The immediate task is to learn how to specify a prefix.

Namely, a prefix is specified using an array syntax:

<font-awesome-icon :icon=”[‘fas’, ‘spinner’]” />

The prefix is the first element in the array, and the icon name is the second. Under the hood, the FontAwesomeIcon component automatically adds the fa- to the front of the icon name, and if the library prefix is not specified, it uses the fas library (Solid). That explains why the JavaScript and Vue.js icons did not load: because we did not explicitly use the fab prefix.

We can remedy this by making the following code change in App.vue :

<p>Have a module of JavaScript: <font-awesome-icon :icon=”[ ‘fab’, ‘js’ ]” /></p> <p>Have a module of Vue.js: <font-awesome-icon :icon=”[ ‘fab’, ‘vuejs’ ]” /></p>

And immediately the icons pop right up:

In addition to solving that specific problem, we have a number of special effects to explore. These special effects can be implemented not only with the <font-awesome-icon> component, but also with the <i> approach.

Before we go off and explore the special effects, we must stop and contrast between the two approaches.

The build process for Vue.js applications ensures that only the required code is packaged and sent to the browser. The approach of defining the <font-awesome-icon> component, and individually importing each required icon, takes a little bit more code, but the gain is that when the application reaches the browser, it does not receive the entire Font Awesome icon library. Instead, it only receives the code and icons your application declared.

The Vue.js integration of Font Awesome does allow this shortcut:

import { fab } from ‘@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons’; library.add(fab);

That imports every icon in the Brands library in one go, without having to individually import each icon. While this is convenient, we are warned, “Be careful with this approach as it may be convenient in the beginning but your bundle size will be large.” Refer back to the discussion about minimizing application size.

Another issue we are cautioned against is that this approach may not work:

import { faJs, faVuejs } from ‘@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons’;

This is an ES6 feature that ensures import of only the requested portions of a given module. At the current time, tools like Babel are used to convert this into equivalent ES5 code, not all of which will support this feature. Because each icon is stored as an individual file inside the package, an alternative is to use this:

import faJs from ‘@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons/faJs’; import faVuejs from ‘@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons/faVuejs’;

This references the individual file inside the package rather than extracting the object from an aggregate package.

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Special effects in Font Awesome

Looking at the Font Awesome documentation, we see some tantalizing special effects that are begging to be explored.

Make a duplicate of the 005-brands-2 directory called 006-effects . An online demo for this step is here:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #6 — Showing special effects Vue.js + Font Awesome #6 — Showing special effects by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

We have a fair bit of surgery to implement a long list of special effects supported by the Font Awesome library.

In main.js , change the imports to this:

import Vue from 'vue'; import App from './App.vue'; import { library } from '@fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core'; import { faCoffee, faSpinner, faWrench, faAmbulance, faEdit, faCircle, faCheck, faChessQueen, faPlus, faEquals, faArrowRight, faPencilAlt, faComment, faHeadphones, faSquare, faCalendar, faCertificate, faEnvelope, faTimes, faBookmark, faHeart, faPlay, faSun, faMoon, faStar } from '@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons'; import { faJs, faVuejs, faFacebookF } from '@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons'; import { FontAwesomeIcon, FontAwesomeLayers, FontAwesomeLayersText } from '@fortawesome/vue-fontawesome' library.add( faCoffee, faSpinner, faWrench, faAmbulance, faSquare, faEdit, faCircle, faCheck, faChessQueen, faHeadphones, faPlus, faEquals, faArrowRight, faPencilAlt, faComment, faCalendar, faCertificate, faEnvelope, faTimes, faBookmark, faHeart, faPlay, faSun, faMoon, faStar, faJs, faVuejs, faFacebookF); Vue.component('font-awesome-icon', FontAwesomeIcon); Vue.component('font-awesome-layers', FontAwesomeLayers); Vue.component('font-awesome-layers-text', FontAwesomeLayersText); Vue.config.productionTip = false; new Vue({ el: '#app', render: h => h(App) });

This brings in a the icons we’ll be using in the demo, plus two new components. The new components implement a form of layered composition.

The next stage is in App.vue to change the <template> section to this:

<template> <div id="app"> <h1>Icon sizing</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="wrench" size="xs" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="coffee" size="lg" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" size="2x" /> <h1>Rotation</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" rotation="90" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" rotation="180" size="lg" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" rotation="270" size="2x" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" rotation="270" size="2x" /> <h1>Flips</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" flip="horizontal" size="lg"/> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" flip="vertical" size="lg"/> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" flip="both" size="lg"/> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" flip="vertical" size="lg"/> <h1>Animation</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" spin /> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" pulse /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" size="lg" spin /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" size="lg" pulse /> <h1>Border</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" border size="lg"/> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" flip="vertical" border size="lg"/> <h1>Pull left/right</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" pull="left" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" pull="right" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" flip="vertical" pull="right" border size="lg"/> <h1 style="clear: both">Power transforms</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="spinner" transform="shrink-6 left-4" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="ambulance" size="lg" :transform="{ rotate: 42 }" /> <h1>Masking</h1> <font-awesome-icon icon="pencil-alt" transform="shrink-10 up-.5" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="pencil-alt" transform="shrink-10 up-.5" mask="comment" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'facebook-f' ]" transform="shrink-3.5 down-1.6 right-1.25" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'facebook-f' ]" transform="shrink-3.5 down-1.6 right-1.25" mask="circle" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="headphones" transform="shrink-6" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="headphones" transform="shrink-6" mask="square" style="background:MistyRose" size="4x" /> <h1>Layers</h1> <font-awesome-layers class="fa-4x"> <font-awesome-icon icon="circle" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="check" transform="shrink-6" style="color: white;" /> </font-awesome-layers> <font-awesome-layers class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="circle" style="color:Tomato" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="times" class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-6" /> </font-awesome-layers> <font-awesome-layers class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="bookmark" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="heart" class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-10 up-2" style="color:Tomato"/> </font-awesome-layers> <font-awesome-layers class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="play" transform="rotate--90 grow-2" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="sun" class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-10 up-2"/> <font-awesome-icon icon="moon" class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-11 down-4.2 left-4"/> <font-awesome-icon icon="star" class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-11 down-4.2 right-4"/> </font-awesome-layers> <h1>Layers text</h1> <font-awesome-layers full-width class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="calendar"/> <font-awesome-layers-text class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-8 down-3" value="27" style="font-weight:900"/> </font-awesome-layers> <font-awesome-layers full-width class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="certificate"/> <font-awesome-layers-text class="fa-inverse" transform="shrink-11.5 rotate--30" value="NEW" style="font-weight:900"/> </font-awesome-layers> <font-awesome-layers full-width class="fa-4x" style="background:MistyRose"> <font-awesome-icon icon="envelope"/> <span class="fa-layers-counter" style="background:Tomato">1,419</span> </font-awesome-layers> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App' } </script> <style> h1 { border-bottom: solid 1px black; } </style>

There’s a lot here. The examples are divided into sections based on the type of special effect being used.

Specific special effects are designated using attributes on the elements. It’s possible to change the size of the icon with size=”..” attributes. As you might expect, the rotation=”..” attribute rotates the icon, flip=”..” flips the icon, and so on. The attributes are mostly fairly obvious as to their function.

A not-so-obvious attribute is pull=”..” , where the effect is similar to the float property, in that the icon floats at the left or right.

The <font-awesome-layers> component encapsulates a group of other icons, layering them on top of each other. It’s used for compositing new icons from the existing icons, along with the available special effects transformations.

And this is what it looks like.

The <font-awesome-icon> , <font-awesome-layers> and <font-awesome-layers-text> components are related to capabilities provided by the Font Awesome library.

Start with the documentation here.

Icon buttons and conditional rendering

For a last example, let’s consider a common use case for icons: Toolbar Buttons. And while we’re at it, let’s look at the effect of Vue.js conditionals on choosing Font Awesome icons to render.

Duplicate the directory 002-brands to be 007-buttons-conditionals . Or try the online demo at:

Vue.js + Font Awesome #7 — Icon buttons and conditionally showing icons Vue.js + Font Awesome #7 — Icon buttons and conditionally showing icons by robogeek using @fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core, @fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons, @fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons, @fortawesome/vue-fontawesome, vue

In main.js , change the imports to this:

import Vue from 'vue'; import App from './App.vue'; import { library } from '@fortawesome/fontawesome-svg-core'; import { faCoffee, faCocktail, faGlassMartini, faBeer } from '@fortawesome/free-solid-svg-icons'; import { faJs, faVuejs, faJava, faPhp, faPython, faCss3, faHtml5 } from '@fortawesome/free-brands-svg-icons'; import { FontAwesomeIcon } from '@fortawesome/vue-fontawesome'; library.add(faCoffee, faCocktail, faGlassMartini, faBeer, faJs, faVuejs, faJava, faPhp, faPython, faCss3, faHtml5); Vue.component('font-awesome-icon', FontAwesomeIcon); Vue.config.productionTip = false; new Vue({ el: '#app', render: h => h(App) });

Again, we are importing a few new Font Awesome icons. To put them to use, in App.vue , change the <template> to the following:

<template> <div id="app"> <h1>Icon Buttons and Conditional Icons</h1> <p>Drink: {{ drink }} <font-awesome-icon icon="coffee" size="4x" v-if="drink == 'Coffee'" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="cocktail" size="4x" v-if="drink == 'Cocktail'" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="glass-martini" size="4x" v-if="drink == 'Martini'" /> <font-awesome-icon icon="beer" size="4x" v-if="drink == 'Beer'" /> </p> <p>Language: {{ language }} <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'js' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'JavaScript'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'Vue.js'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'java' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'Java'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'php' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'PHP'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'python' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'Python'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'css3' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'CSS 3'" /> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'html5' ]" size="4x" v-if="language == 'HTML 5'" /> </p> <p> <button @click="drink = 'Coffee'"> <font-awesome-icon icon="coffee" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="drink = 'Cocktail'"> <font-awesome-icon icon="cocktail" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="drink = 'Martini'"> <font-awesome-icon icon="glass-martini" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="drink = 'Beer'"> <font-awesome-icon icon="beer" size="4x" /> </button> </p> <p> <button @click="language='JavaScript'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'js' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='Vue.js'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'vuejs' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='Java'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'java' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='PHP'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'php' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='Python'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'python' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='CSS 3'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'css3' ]" size="4x" /> </button> <button @click="language='HTML 5'"> <font-awesome-icon :icon="[ 'fab', 'html5' ]" size="4x" /> </button> </p> </div> </template> <script> export default { name: 'App', data() { return { drink: "", language: "" } } } </script> <style> </style>

As far as active Vue.js components go, this is pretty simple. We have some buttons that show various Font Awesome icons, and when clicked, those buttons assign a corresponding value to a variable.

In another section of the UI, we display the text code used as well as the corresponding icon. The selection of the icon is performed with Vue.js conditionals.

After running the application, we can click on the buttons and the corresponding choices show up. The UI might look like this:

Conclusion

Icons of course add a lot to any graphical application. They convey meaning to a different level of human experience than words, and therefore can make an easier-to-learn application. Also, as symbols there is less need to translate the user interface (localization) for different languages, because well chosen symbols are universal.

With this tutorial, we’ve seen how easy it is to add icons from the Font Awesome set into your Vue.js application, and we’ve dabbled in using the underlying Font Awesome library.

The Vue.js integration for Font Awesome is built upon that underlying library. Its capabilities are presented as Vue.js components which expose most of the functionality.