2.2 KiB
title | description | slug | hide_title |
---|---|---|---|
Tray | This guide will take you through the process of creating a Tray icon with its own context menu to the system's notification area. | tray | true |
Tray
Overview
This guide will take you through the process of creating a Tray icon with its own context menu to the system's notification area.
On MacOS and Ubuntu, the Tray will be located on the top right corner of your screen, adjacent to your battery and wifi icons. On Windows, the Tray will usually be located in the bottom right corner.
Example
main.js
First we must import app
, Tray
, Menu
, nativeImage
from electron
.
const { app, Tray, Menu, nativeImage } = require('electron')
Next we will create our Tray. To do this, we will use a
NativeImage
icon,
which can be created through any one of these
methods.
Note that we wrap our Tray creation code within an
app.whenReady
as we will need to wait for our electron app to finish initializing.
let tray
app.whenReady().then(() => {
const icon = nativeImage.createFromPath('path/to/asset.png')
tray = new Tray(icon)
// note: your contextMenu, Tooltip and Title code will go here!
})
Great! Now we can start attaching a context menu to our Tray, like so:
const contextMenu = Menu.buildFromTemplate([
{ label: 'Item1', type: 'radio' },
{ label: 'Item2', type: 'radio' },
{ label: 'Item3', type: 'radio', checked: true },
{ label: 'Item4', type: 'radio' }
])
tray.setContextMenu(contextMenu)
The code above will create 4 separate radio-type items in the context menu. To read more about constructing native menus, click here.
Finally, let's give our tray a tooltip and a title.
tray.setToolTip('This is my application')
tray.setTitle('This is my title')
Conclusion
After you start your electron app, you should see the Tray residing in either the top or bottom right of your screen, depending on your operating system.