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Swift systemname6/12/2023 ![]() Having custom collections can keep you from getting overwhelmed by the sheer volume of symbols available as well. Here I set up a collection for a fictional weather app with some thematically consistent symbols. ![]() Just tap the + button in the bottom left of the view to create a new collection and drag/drop any icons that you use into your collection. Make sure that you squeeze everything you can out of the SF Symbols app and make a custom collection for the symbols that your app uses. Get Even More Out of SF Symbols with Custom Collections ![]() If you need to scan the list of all symbols to isolate just iOS 13.0+ compatibility, for example, you can also switch from default Gallery mode to List Mode by tapping the appropriate button in the middle of the toolbar. Here we can see that ‘lasso’ is supported in iOS 13.0+ and should be safe.īut the newer, fancier ‘lasso.sparkles’ is only available in iOS 14.0+. The easiest way is just to select the image in question and tap the Info icon on the top tool bar, which will show a compatibility panel like below. There are a couple ways inside the SF Symbols app that you can do this. If you still need to support iOS 13 (like most of us through at least next fall), it’s critical not to use an iOS 14-only symbol without realizing it. With all the new symbols it’s easy to get confused about which symbols are iOS 14+ and which are not. With iOS 14, Apple released another 750+ new symbols along with a number of multi-color symbols as well that adapt to Apple system colors. Let image = UIImage(systemName: "lasso")?.applyingSymbolConfiguration(configuration)ĭoing all this to an actual icon so it blends more completely with the text and UI around it is very cool! Enter SF Symbols 2 and Even More Symbols Let configuration = UIImage.SymbolConfiguration(textStyle.
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