2 KiB
Image
In atom-shell images are represented by their file paths, we currently do not support in-memory images or remote images.
For example when creating tray or setting window's icon, you can pass image's
file path as String
to represent an image:
var appIcon = new Tray('/Users/somebody/images/icon.png');
var window = new BrowserWindow({icon: '/Users/somebody/images/window.png'});
Supported formats
On Mac all formats supported by the system can be used, while on Linux and
Windows only PNG
and JPG
formats are supported.
So it is recommended to use PNG
images for all cases.
High resolution image
On platforms that have high-DPI support, you can append @2x
after image's
file name's base name to mark it as a high resolution image.
For example if icon.png
is a normal image that has standard resolution, the
icon@2x.png
would be treated as a high resolution image that has double DPI
dense.
If you want to support displays with different DPI denses at the same time, you can put images with different sizes in the same folder, and use the filename without DPI suffixes, like this:
images/
├── icon.png
├── icon@2x.png
└── icon@3x.png
var appIcon = new Tray('/Users/somebody/images/icon.png');
Following suffixes as DPI denses are also supported:
@1x
@1.25x
@1.33x
@1.4x
@1.5x
@1.8x
@2x
@2.5x
@3x
@4x
@5x
Template image
Template images consist of black and clear colors (and an alpha channel). Template images are not intended to be used as standalone images and are usually mixed with other content to create the desired final appearance.
The most common case is to use template image for menu bar icon so it can adapt to both light and dark menu bars.
Template image is only supported on Mac.
To mark an image as template image, its filename should end with the word
Template
, examples are:
xxxTemplate.png
xxxTemplate@2x.png