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gfxholo/iconic: Customize your icons and colors directly from the Obsidian UI, including tabs, files & folders, bookmarks, tags, properties, and ribbon commands.

Customize your icons and colors directly from the Obsidian UI, including tabs, files & folders, bookmarks, tags, properties, and ribbon commands. - gfxholo/iconic

by gfxholo github.com 901 words
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Iconic

A plugin for iconophiles, designed to blend seamlessly with vanilla Obsidian.

Click almost any icon on a tab, sidebar, ribbon, or the title bar to swap in one of the 1,700+ Lucide icons included in the app, or one of the 1,900+ emojis that your device supports.

Banner

⤿ Themes: Ayu Light & Mirage / Fancy-a-Story / Primary

Includes language support for English, Arabic, German, Spanish, French, Indonesian, Japanese, Russian, Ukrainian, and Simplified Chinese. Most of these languages are currently machine-translated, but if you can supply more accurate translations, absolutely send a message or a pull request:)

Supported items

How to use

Changing an icon

Secondary-click an item whose icon you want to change, then click Change icon from the menu. You can open menus on mobile by pressing & holding an item. Certain lists like Files, Bookmarks, and Properties let you hold Alt or ⇧ Shift to select multiple items at once.

Every icon is searchable by name. You can filter between icons and/or emojis by clicking the bottom two toggles. When you find an icon that sings for you, click it to confirm.

You can also choose one of nine optional colors per icon. These colors follow the CSS theme of your vault, so they adjust automatically when it changes. If you prefer a specific RGB color, secondary-click the bubble to open the full color picker.

Icon picker

The icon picker will also display a warning if a rule in your rulebook is overruling its icon. To learn about that feature, see below.

Setting up rules

You can set up a rulebook to automate your file & folder icons based on a variety of conditions, like their name, their extension, their parent folder, their tags, their property values, the date you’ve created or modified them, and even the current time of day. Automated icons never remove your custom icons — only replace them visually — so you can be as experimental as you want.

Open the rulebook from the ribbon, from the plugin settings, or by using the Open rulebook command. There are currently two pages in the rulebook: File rules and Folder rules, which affect files and folders respectively.

Rule picker

Click the green (+) to add a new rule, or right-click an existing rule to see more actions.

Every rule has a name, and an icon, which will overrule the icon of anything that it matches. You can enable and disable a rule using its toggle. Rules at the top of the list have the highest priority, so drag them around as needed!

Editing a rule

To start editing a rule, click the ⚙️ beside it.

Rule editor

You can edit the rule’s conditions in this window. A condition is a true or false test — it either matches, or it doesn’t, and you can add any number of conditions to a rule. Rules interpret their conditions based on their All / Any / None setting. For example, if you want a rule to match when any of its conditions match, click the Any button. You can always see what your rule is matching by clicking the Matches button at the bottom.

When you’re using Obsidian, if your rule is overruling an icon, you can secondary-click that icon and choose Edit rule to return to this window quickly.

There are several types of conditions you can add to a rule:

Date & time conditions are checked once every minute, so you can use them to modify your icons in real time.

What makes this plugin different from Iconize?

Iconic and Iconize can both change the icons & colors of files & folders, and automate icons based on their filepath. But Iconic can also:

Can I use both plugins together?

Sort of, just expect a few visual bugs! They currently do some fighting over control of tab icons and the Bookmarks pane.

License

This plugin is released under an MIT No Attribution license, which means you’re free to modify and share its source code without crediting the authors of this repository. It also protects those authors from liability for damages, so I recommend using a similar license if you republish this code.