7.0 KiB
title | description | type | page_title | slug | position | tags | ticketid | res_type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Custom Font Icons Fail in Telerik Components (Empty Icon) | How to use custom font icons in telerik components and how to avoid them not rendering | troubleshooting | Custom font icons in Telerik components | common-kb-custom-font-icons-fail | 1517982, 1514661 | kb |
Environment
Product | Menu for Blazor, TreeView for Blazor, Drawer for Blazor, ContextMenu for Blazor |
Product Version | 3.7.0 and older |
Description
I would like to use the fontawesome icon library or open iconic. I'm trying to put an icon in front of the text of an menu item. As described in the help pages, this can be done by using IconClassField
of the component. But if I use that, it will render a span with classes k-icon k-i-fas fa-fog
instead of fas fa-fog
(<span class="k-icon k-i-fas fa-cog"></span>
).
The result is an item with an empty span
and I don't see the icons.
If I use similar code with the IconClass
of a plain component like a TelerikButton
I can see the icons, but I can't see them in data bound components like the menu, drawer, or treeview.
Possible Cause
The most common reason for such a problem is that the model field that carries the classes for the custom font matches the default name that the Telerik component uses for the built-in [Telerik icons]({%slug common-features-icons%}) - Icon
.
The databinding settings of the databound components have default field names and they look for Telerik icons in the Icon
field of the model, unless you specify otherwise.
The built-in Telerik Icon takes precedence over custom icons and renders with the Telerik classes (k-icon k-i-*
).
You can find the list of default values in the corresponding component's Data Binding article and Icons article.
Steps to Reproduce
caption The following snippet shows an attempt to use custom icons that only renders one Telerik icon
@* Just one example of including custom font icon libraries.
Make sure to use the correct way and resources for your actual project *@
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/open-iconic/1.1.1/font/css/open-iconic-bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/font-awesome/5.15.3/css/all.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />
<TelerikMenu Data="@MenuData"
IconClassField="@nameof(MenuModel.Icon)">
</TelerikMenu>
@code {
public List<MenuModel> MenuData { get; set; }
protected override void OnInitialized()
{
GenerateMenuData();
}
public void GenerateMenuData()
{
MenuData = new List<MenuModel>()
{
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - easy",
Icon = "email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - like custom font",
Icon = "k-icon k-i-email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "OpenIconic - fail",
Icon = "oi oi-wrench",
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "FontAwesome - fail",
Icon = "fas fa-cog"
}
};
}
public class MenuModel
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public string Icon { get; set; }
}
}
Solution
There are two ways to solve this:
-
Use a field name in your model that does not match the default field name (
Icon
) - for example, call the fieldMyFontIconClasses
. -
Or, set a dummy field for the Telerik icon so that it does not look for the default name (
Icon
), leaving it free for your own settings.
````DummyIconFieldName @* Just one example of including custom font icon libraries. Make sure to use the correct way and resources for your actual project *@caption The examples below have the same result
@code { public List MenuData { get; set; }
protected override void OnInitialized()
{
GenerateMenuData();
}
public void GenerateMenuData()
{
MenuData = new List<MenuModel>()
{
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - fail with custom fonts",
Icon = "email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - success with custom fonts",
Icon = "k-icon k-i-email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "OpenIconic - fail",
Icon = "oi oi-wrench",
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "FontAwesome - fail",
Icon = "fas fa-cog"
}
};
}
public class MenuModel
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public string Icon { get; set; }
}
}
````CustomFontClassFieldName
@* Just one example of including custom font icon libraries.
Make sure to use the correct way and resources for your actual project *@
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/open-iconic/1.1.1/font/css/open-iconic-bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />
<link href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/font-awesome/5.15.3/css/all.min.css" rel="stylesheet" />
<TelerikMenu Data="@MenuData"
IconClassField="@nameof(MenuModel.MyFontIconClasses)">
</TelerikMenu>
@code {
public List<MenuModel> MenuData { get; set; }
protected override void OnInitialized()
{
GenerateMenuData();
}
public void GenerateMenuData()
{
MenuData = new List<MenuModel>()
{
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - fail with custom fonts",
MyFontIconClasses = "email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "TelerikIcon - success with custom fonts",
MyFontIconClasses = "k-icon k-i-email"
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "OpenIconic - fail",
MyFontIconClasses = "oi oi-wrench",
},
new MenuModel()
{
Text = "FontAwesome - fail",
MyFontIconClasses = "fas fa-cog"
}
};
}
public class MenuModel
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public string MyFontIconClasses { get; set; }
}
}