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Contributing to Simple Icons

Important

We ask that all users read our legal disclaimer before contributing to Simple Icons.

Simple Icons welcomes contributions and corrections. Before contributing, please make sure you have read the guidelines below. If you decide to contribute anything, please follow the steps below. If you're new to git and/or GitHub, we suggest you go through the GitHub Guides.

  1. Fork this repository

  2. (Optional) Clone the fork

    • Using SSH

      git clone --filter=tree:0 [email protected]:simple-icons/simple-icons.git
    • Using HTTPS

      git clone --filter=tree:0 https://github.com/simple-icons/simple-icons.git
    • Using GitHub CLI

      gh repo clone simple-icons/simple-icons -- --filter=tree:0
  3. Create a new branch from the latest develop

  4. Start hacking on the new branch

  5. Commit and push to the new branch

  6. Make a pull request

Table of contents

Requesting an Icon

We welcome icon requests. Before you submit a new issue please make sure the icon:

  • Has not already been requested. If you find an existing issue or pull request for the brand you're looking for then please add a reaction or comment to show your support.
  • Is of a popular brand - see "Assessing Popularity" below.
  • Doesn't fall into one of the following categories:
    • Illegal services (e.g. piracy, malware, threatening material, spam, etc.)
    • Governmental agencies, programs, departments
      • Allowed: International organizations and NGOs with supranational interests
      • Allowed: Space agencies
    • Symbols, including flags and banners
    • Sport clubs
      • Allowed: Sports organizations
    • Yearly releases
    • Universities or other educational institutions
    • Any brands representing individuals rather than an organization, company, or product. This includes musicians, bands, and social media personalities.

Forbidden Brands

Some companies and organizations are excessively protective with their brands, so please don't consider them:

  • BP
  • Disney
  • International Olympic Committee
  • Mattel
  • Microchip Technology Inc.
  • Oracle
  • Do you know more? Please, report them.

If you are in doubt, feel free to submit it and we'll have a look.

Assessing Popularity

Tip

Similarweb is now trying to force users to log in in order to view statistics. You can bypass this by going directly to: https://similarweb.com/website/google.com, replacing google.com with the TLD you would like to get the stats on!

To be considered popular enough to be within our scope, a brand must be in existence for at least one year (from date of first stable release, where applicable) and meet one of the following metrics of popularity, in order of preference:

  1. Its website's Similarweb global rank is in the top 500k.
    • As Similarweb updates its data only once every month, there will be a monitoring window for websites ranked between 450k & 550k until the next update, unless the brand is within scope on any other metric below.
    • For existing icons in our library, the threshold is dropped from 500k to 750k.
    • A rank lower than 2m, without any other metric being provided, will result in the brand being declared outside our scope.
  2. The website's Similarweb rank in any one country is either:
    • In the top 100, or,
    • In the top 10k, with a global rank of 1m or better.
  3. The website's Similarweb global rank in any one category is either:
    • In the top 50, or,
    • In the top 5k, with a global rank of 1m or better.
  4. In cases where a brand does not have its own website the Similarweb rank of its parent company will be accepted if the brand is that company's primary product.
  5. Its packages meet one of the following minimum requirements:
  6. If the brand is a Fediverse project, it needs to have a minimum of 10,000 Monthly Active Users as listed on FediDB.
    • In addition, for servers that have a unique recognizable logo, the User Count as listed on FediDB should be 100,000 or higher.
  7. The brand's popularity can be illustrated by other publicly available & verifiable statistic (e.g., downloads, usage).
    • Stats should preferably also include data on one of our existing brands so a direct comparison can be made.
  8. The brand's popularity can be illustrated through a worldwide Google Trends comparison, or similar.
    • Must be with a similar brand that is already in our library and still within our scope, or that would qualify under any metric.
    • Must be unambiguous (i.e., it's not a suitable metric for brands with generic words for names).
    • Trending equal to or higher than the compared brand will be considered in scope.
    • Trending lower than the compared brand but with an upward trajectory will require the consensus of the person providing the comparison and at least 2 project maintainers.
  9. Where applicable, the primary repository for the brand's GitHub project meets the following requirements (see note below):
    • A minimum of 5k GitHub stars will be required for consideration, providing,
    • The repository is still active, and,
    • Its star history is on a consistently upward trajectory.

If all else fails, though, feel free to make a good case for the popularity of the brand you're requesting on any other grounds, provided it can be backed up with verifiable data. Example: a car manufacturer's own website falls outside our scope but a major dealership dealing exclusively or primarily in that brand falls within our scope - in that case we'd accept the manufacturer as being popular. If you can provide a particularly good metric that can be applied to other brands then it will be added to this list.

Note

All metrics & cut-offs above are subject to ongoing review and potential change. These current metrics were devised in order to no longer rely on GitHub stars as an indication of a project's popularity. But, for projects that only exist on GitHub, we do still need some way of assessing their popularity so, until we can come up with a better way to do so, we have kept stars for the time being but will not be putting as much weight on them as in the past. If you know of a better way of assessing the popularity of a GitHub project then please create an issue for discussion.

Opening an Issue

When submitting a request for a new or updated icon include helpful information such as:

  • Issue Title: The brand name. For example:

    • New Icons: Request: GitHub Icon
    • Icon Updates: Update: GitHub Color or Update: GitHub Icon
  • Issue Body: Links to official sources for the brand's icon and colors (e.g. media kits, brand guidelines, SVG files, etc.)

If you have an affiliation to the brand you are requesting that allows you to speak on their behalf then please disclose that in your issue as it can help speed up our research process.

Adding or Updating an Icon

Note

If you decide to add an icon without requesting it first, the requirements above still apply.

1. Identify Official Logos and Colors

Most of the icons and brand colors on SimpleIcons have been derived from official sources. Using official sources helps ensure that the icons and colors in SimpleIcons accurately match the brand they represent. Thankfully, this is usually a simple process as organizations often provide brand guides and high-quality versions of their logo for download.

Official high quality brand logos and brand colors can usually be found in the following locations:

  1. About pages, Press pages, Media Kits, and Brand Guidelines.
  2. Website headers
  3. Favicons
  4. Wikimedia (which should provide a source)
  5. GitHub repositories

It may be the case that no official source exists, but an unofficial icon has gained widespread acceptance and popularity. In such cases the unofficial icon can be included, but the details will be judged on a case-by-case basis. The JavaScript icon is an example of this. Notice that an unofficial source will never supersede an official one, even if it is more popular. An unofficial icon will only be accepted if no official option exists.

Icon Guidelines

Working with an SVG version of the logo is best. In the absence of an SVG version, other vector filetypes may work as well (e.g. EPS, AI, PDF). In the absence of vector logos, a vector can be created from a high-quality rasterized image, however, this is much more labor-intensive.

If the icon includes a (registered) trademark icon we follow the guidelines below to decide whether to include the symbol or not:

  • If brand guidelines explicitly require including the symbol, it must be included.
  • If the brand itself includes the symbol with all uses of the logo, even at small sizes, it must be included.
  • If the symbol is incorporated into the design of the logo (e.g. Chupa Chups), it must be included.
  • If there is ambiguity about the conditions under which the symbol is required, it must be included if it is a registered trademark symbol (®) but not if is a trademark symbol (™).
  • If brand guidelines say it may be removed, usually when the icon is displayed at small sizes, it must not be included.
  • If there is no explicit requirement that a symbol must be included, it must not be included.

Color Guidelines

For color, the brand's primary color should be used. The official color of a brand is usually found in their brand guidelines, media kits, or some of the other locations mentioned above. If no official color can be identified, use the brand's primary web color or the most prominent color in the logo itself (please indicate why you choose the particular color in your pull request). Simple Icons stores brand colors in the standard 6 character hexadecimal format.

2. Extract the Icon from the Logo

There are many different tools for editing SVG files, some options include:

Name Description Platform Price
Inkscape Vector Graphics Editor Windows, Mac, Linux Free
Boxy SVG Vector Graphics Editor Windows, Mac, Linux $ / Free (Linux, Web)
Affinity Designer Vector Graphics Editor Windows, Mac $
Adobe Illustrator Vector Graphics Editor Windows, Mac $ - $$$

Using your preferred tool you should:

  1. Isolate the icon from any text or extraneous items.
  2. Merge any overlapping paths.
  3. Compound all paths into one.
  4. Change the icon's viewbox/canvas/page size to 24x24.
  5. Scale the icon to fit the viewbox, while preserving the icon's original proportions. This means the icon should be touching at least two sides of the viewbox.
  6. Center the icon horizontally and vertically.
  7. Remove all colors. The icon should be monochromatic.
  8. Export the icon as an SVG.

Some icons can't be easily converted to a monochromatic version due to colour changes, shadows, or other effects. For such cases, the addition of gaps is the recommended approach, with a preferred width of 0.5px. In some situations, a different gap may be required, but that will be determined on a per-case basis.

If you have any problems or questions while creating the SVG, check out the GitHub Discussions. You may find an answer to your question there or you can ask your question if you did not find an answer.

3. Optimize the Icon

All icons in Simple Icons have been optimized with the SVGO tool. This can be done in one of three ways:

  • The SVGO Command Line Tool
    • Run the following command npx svgo icons/file-to-optimize.svg
    • Check if there is a loss of quality in the output, if so increase the precision.
  • The SVGOMG Online Tool
    • Click "Open SVG" and select an SVG file.
    • Set the precision to about 3, depending on if there is a loss of quality.
    • Leave the remaining settings untouched (or reset them with the button at the bottom of the settings).
    • Click the download button.
  • The SVGO Command Line Tool in Docker
    • If none of the options above work for you, it is possible to build a Docker image for compressing the images.
    • Build: docker build . -t simple-icons
    • Run: docker run --rm -v ${PWD}/icons/file-to-optimize.svg:/image.svg simple-icons

After optimizing the icon, double-check it against your original version to ensure no visual imperfections have crept in. Also, make sure that the dimensions of the path have not been changed so that the icon no longer fits exactly within the canvas. We currently check the dimensions up to a precision of 3 decimal points.

4. Annotate the Icon

Each icon in Simple Icons has been annotated with a number of attributes and elements to increase accessibility. These include:

  • An svg element with:
    • An img role attribute.
      • role="img"
    • A 24x24 viewbox.
      • viewBox="0 0 24 24"
    • The svg namespace.
      • xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
  • A title element containing the brand name.
    • <title>Adobe Photoshop</title>

Here is part of the svg for the Adobe Photoshop icon as an example:

<svg role="img" viewBox="0 0 24 24" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><title>Adobe Photoshop</title>...</svg>

5. Check the Icon

The final icon should:

  • Be properly annotated as discussed above.
  • Be monochromatic.
    • Remove all fill colors so that icon defaults to black.
  • Be scaled to fit the viewbox, while preserving the icon's original proportions.
    • This means the icon should be touching at least two sides of the viewbox.
  • Be vertically and horizontally centered.
  • Be minified to a single line with no formatting.
  • Contain only a single path element.
  • Not contain extraneous elements.
    • This includes: circle, ellipse, rect, polygon, line, g, etc.
  • Not contain extraneous attributes.
    • This includes: width, height, fill, stroke, clip, font, etc.

Here is the svg for the Adobe Photoshop icon as an example:

<svg role="img" viewBox="0 0 24 24" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><title>Adobe Photoshop</title><path d="M0 .3v23.4h24V.3H0zm1 1h22v21.4H1V1.3zm4.8 4.48c0-.067.14-.116.224-.116.644-.033 1.588-.05 2.578-.05 2.772 0 3.85 1.52 3.85 3.466 0 2.54-1.842 3.63-4.102 3.63-.38 0-.51-.017-.775-.017v3.842c0 .083-.033.116-.115.116H5.916c-.083 0-.115-.03-.115-.113V5.78zm1.775 5.312c.23.016.412.016.81.016 1.17 0 2.27-.412 2.27-1.996 0-1.27-.786-1.914-2.122-1.914-.396 0-.775.016-.957.033v3.864zm8.607-1.188c-.792 0-1.056.396-1.056.726 0 .363.18.61 1.237 1.155 1.568.76 2.062 1.485 2.062 2.557 0 1.6-1.22 2.46-2.87 2.46-.876 0-1.62-.183-2.05-.43-.065-.033-.08-.082-.08-.165V14.74c0-.1.048-.133.114-.084.624.413 1.352.594 2.012.594.792 0 1.122-.33 1.122-.776 0-.363-.23-.677-1.237-1.205-1.42-.68-2.014-1.37-2.014-2.527 0-1.287 1.006-2.36 2.755-2.36.86 0 1.464.132 1.794.28.082.05.1.132.1.198v1.37c0 .083-.05.133-.15.1-.444-.264-1.1-.43-1.743-.43z"/></svg>

6. Name the Icon

The filename of the SVG should correspond to the <title> used in the markup file mentioned above, and it should follow the rules below. If you're in doubt, you can always run npm run get-filename -- "Brand name" to get the correct filename.

  1. Use lowercase letters without whitespace, for example:

    title: Adobe Photoshop
    filename: adobephotoshop.svg
  2. Only use latin letters, for example:

    title: Citroën
    filename: citroen.svg
  3. Replace the following symbols with their alias:

    Symbol Alias
    + plus
    . dot
    & and

    for example:

    title: .Net
    filename: dotnet.svg
  4. On rare occasions the resulting name will clash with the name of an existing SVG file in our collection. To resolve such conflicts append _[MODIFIER] to the name, where [MODIFIER] is a short descriptor of the brand or the service they provide and follows the same rules of construction as above.

    for example:

    title: Hive
    filename: hive_blockchain.svg

7. Update the JSON Data for SimpleIcons.org

Icon metadata should be added to the _data/simple-icons.json file. Each icon in the array has three required values:

  • The title of the new SVG.
  • A hex color value that matches the brand's primary color. All uppercase and without the # symbol.
  • The source URL of the logo being used. There are more details below.

There are also optional values that may be provided for each icon, which are listed below.

Here is the object of a fictional brand as an example:

{
    "title": "A Fictional Brand",
    "hex": "123456",
    "source": "https://www.a-fictional-brand.org/logo"
}

You can use npm run add-icon-data to add metadata via a CLI prompt.

Make sure the icon is added in alphabetical order. If you're in doubt, you can always run npm run ourlint - this will tell you if any of the JSON data is in the wrong order.

Optional Data

Additionally, each icon in the _data/simple-icons.json file may be given any of the following optional values:

  • The slug must be used to specify the icon's file name in cases where a modifier has been added to it in order to resolve a clash with an existing icon's name.
  • The guidelines may be used to specify the URL of the brand's guidelines/press kit/etc. This is useful if the SVG file was sourced from a different place, still if the SVG file was sourced from the guidelines, the URL should be duplicated here.
  • The license may be used to specify the license under which the icon is available. This is an object with a type and url. The type should be an SPDX License ID or "custom", the url is optional unless the type is "custom".

Here is the object of the fictional brand from before, but with all optional values, as an example:

{
    "title": "A Fictional Brand",
    "slug": "afictionalbrand_modifier",
    "hex": "123456",
    "source": "https://www.a-fictional-brand.org/logo",
    "guidelines": "https://www.a-fictional-brand.org/brand-guidelines",
    "license": {
        "type": "CC0-1.0",
        "url": "https://www.a-fictional-brand.org/logo/license"
    }
}

Non secured HTTP URLs are forbidden. If a brand's website only supports HTTP, you must still declare the URL using the https:// protocol.

Source Guidelines

We use the source URL as a reference for the current SVG in our repository and as a jumping-off point to find updates if the logo changes. If you used one of the sources listed below, make sure to follow these guidelines. If you're unsure about the source URL you can open a Pull Request and ask for help from others.

If the SVG is sourced from:

  • Branding page: For an SVG from a branding page the source URL should link to the branding page and not the image, PDF, or archive (such as .zip) file.

  • Company website: If the SVG is found on the company website (but there is no branding page) the source URL should link to a common page, such as the home page or about page, that includes the source image and not the image file itself.

  • GitHub: For an SVG from a GitHub (GitLab, BitBucket, etc.) repository the source URL should link to the file that was used as source material. If the color does not come from the file, its origin should be stated in the Pull Request description.

    The commit hash should always be part of the URL. On GitHub, you can get the correct URL by pressing y on the GitHub page you want to link to. You can get help at the getting permanent links to files page.

  • Wikipedia: For an SVG from Wikipedia/Wikimedia the source URL should link to the logo file's page on the relevant site, and not the brand's Wikipedia pages. For example, this is the link for AmericanExpress.

In general, make sure the URL does not contain any tracking identifiers.

Aliases

Lastly, we aim to provide aliases of three types for various reasons. Each type of alias and its purpose can be found below. If you're unsure, you can mention an alias you're considering in your Pull Request so it can be discussed.

Also Known As

We collect "also known as" names to make it easier to find brands that are known by different names or by their abbreviation/full name. This does not include localized names, which are recorded separately. To add an "also known as" name you add the following to the icon data:

{
    "title": "the original title",
    "aliases": {
        "aka": [
            "tot",
            "thetitle"
        ]
    }
}

Where the string is different from the original title as well as all other strings in the list.

Duplicates

We collect the names of duplicates, brands that use the same icon but have a different name, to prevent duplicating an SVG while at the same time making the SVG available under the name of the duplicate. To add a duplicate you add the following to the icon data:

{
    "title": "the original title",
    "hex": "123456",
    "aliases": {
        "dup": [
            {
                "title": "the duplicate's title",
                "hex": "654321", // Only if different from original's color
                "guidelines": "..." // Only if different from original's guidelines
            }
        ]
    }
}

Where the nested title is the name of the duplicate brand. The other fields, hex and guidelines, are only provided if they differ from the original.

Localization

We collect localized names to make it possible to find the brand by it's local name, as well as to provide SVGs with localized titles. To add a localized name you add the following to the icon data:

{
    "title": "the original title",
    "aliases": {
        "loc": {
            "en-US": "A different title"
        }
    }
}

Where the locale is an IETF language tag and title is a different title from the original title.

8. Create a Pull Request

Once you've completed the previous steps, create a pull request to merge your edits into the develop branch. You can run npm run lint to check if there are any issues you still need to address.

If you have an affiliation to the brand you contributing that allows you to speak on their behalf then please disclose that in your pull request as it can help speed up our research and review processes.

Testing Package Locally

  • Make sure you have Node.js installed. At least version ^12.20.0 || ^14.13.1 || >=16.0.0 is required.
  • Install the dependencies using $ npm install.
  • Build and test the package using $ npm test.
  • Run the project linting process using $ npm run lint.

Using Docker

You can build a Docker image for this project which can be used as a development environment and allows you to run SVGO safely. First, build the Docker image for simple-icons (if you haven't yet):

docker build . -t simple-icons

Then, start a Docker container for simple-icons and attach to it:

docker run -it --rm --entrypoint "/bin/ash" simple-icons

Developing Third-Party Extensions

A SDK is included in the simple-icons/sdk entrypoint of the npm package to make it easier the development of third party extensions with JavaScript and TypeScript.

import { getIconsData, type IconData } from 'simple-icons/sdk';

const iconsData: IconData[] = getIconsData();
import { getIconsData } from 'simple-icons/sdk';

/* @typedef {import("./simple-icons/sdk").IconData} IconData */

/* @type {IconData[]} */
const iconsData = getIconsData();