However I would rather use the light bulb icon to the left of the switch label to indicate the actual status of the relay so it is all on one line. I am just using the default light bulb icon. Here is how everything looks right now:
When the state of the status item changes to a 1 I want to turn on the lightbulb icon for the relaySwitch item and when the state of the status item changes to a 0 I want to turn off the lightbulb icon.
If you look in your openhab/webapp/images folder you will find all of the potential icons you can use on your sitemap. You will notice there are often several versions of the same icon. For example, light-on.png and light-off.png. What happens is the sitemap will choose the whatever icon matches the state of the item. So if you choose as your icon for the relaySwitch Item, it will show light-on.png when the Switch is ON and light-off.png when the switch is OFF.
How icons are applied to Items and how they can be made dynamic is documented in the Items wiki page. How icons are applied to the sitemap elements is documented in the Sitemap wiki page. And how to have two way MQTT on the same Item is documented in the MQTT wiki page.
What I am hearing is it is not possible to set just the icon based on an item state correct? Can you not do something like relaySwitch.icon = ON or relaySwitch.icon = OFF or perhaps relaySwitch.icon = light-on.png or relaySwitch.icon = light-off.png? I want to completely disconnect the status of the light icon from the state of the switch and set it solely based on an item state.
Not quite. If you assign to a switch it will use light-on.png when the switch is ON and light-off.png when the switch is OFF. If you have your own icons or using an Item that has a different type of state (e.g. Contacts use OPEN and CLOSED so you would have door-open.png and door-closed.png) you can get the icon based on state by naming the icons appropriately.
I have a few green icons on the left of my inventory quick access bar (one looks like a sword?) And a light bulb icon on the right side. I've searched online and checked guides on Steam, etc, but I cant figure out what those icons are. Did I miss an explanation on screen? Sometimes I click through things too quickly, so it wouldnt surprise me.
Quick Actions can be applied by using the light bulb or screwdriver icons, or by pressing Ctrl+. when your cursor is on a line of code for which an action is available. You'll see an error light bulb if there's a red squiggle indicating an error and Visual Studio has a fix available for that error.
The icon that appears when a Quick Action is available gives an indication of the type of fix or refactoring that's available. The screwdriver icon indicates just that there are actions available to change the code, but you shouldn't necessarily use them. The yellow light bulb icon indicates there are actions available that you should do to improve your code. The error light bulb icon indicates there's an action available that fixes an error in your code.
1. Navigate to your form/record 2. Right click on the field with the suggestion icon and click configure "Dictionary" (For example short description in above screesnhot)3. On Choice List, Select Drop Down= None Save.
This open source icon is named "light bulb" and is licensed under the open source MIT license. It's available to be downloaded in SVG and PNG formats (available in 256, 512, 1024 and 2048 PNG sizes).
It's part of the icon set "Majesticons Icons Set", which has 420 icons in it.
The following styles have this icon in it: Line
If you need this icon available in another format, it should be pretty straight forward to download it as an SVG image file, and then import it into apps like Canva, Fotor, Sketch or Snappa. Converting it to an ICO, JPEG or WebP image format or file type should also be pretty simple (we hope to add that feature to Iconduck soon).
This icon can be used for both Personal & Commercial purposes and projects, but please check the license to see if the designer is requesting attribution (for example, a link back to their website).
Today we'll be learning how to create a vector light bulb icon with the free, open source vector program Inkscape. We'll be following a Tango style of design for this project. Read on to learn more about the Tango Desktop Project and to learn how to create this icon.
The Tango Desktop Project is a set of guidelines that icon creators can use to make a consistent appearance in their icons. It's most famously displayed in Linux distributions, but you might also notice it in standalone applications, such as GIMP. Below, is a sample of the official Tango icons. We'll be replicating this look.
Create a new 48px by 48px canvas. By default Inkscape has a few undesirable settings for creating icons. Go to the Document Properties dialog window and select the Snap tab. Uncheck the box next to Enable snapping. Throughout this tutorial you'll need to occasionally use a grid to align the shapes to the canvas. To enable the Grid select the menu item View > Grid (#). I used a grey background in this tutorial to make things show up more.
Change the direction of the gradient path by going into Edit Paths mode (F2) and dragging the square point of the gradient line to the upper left hand corner of the light bulb. Then drag the circle end to the lower right hand corner. This is to create a consistent light source in the icon.
Select the outline, copy it (Ctrl + C) and paste it onto the same location (Ctrl + Alt + V). This is going to be the trademark inner highlight found in most Tango-styled icons. Delete the fill of the copied outline and change the stroke to pure white. This will make it more recognizable.
Refer to the reference bulb earlier in the post and you'll notice the actual filament is the material between these two wires. Since a 48px by 48px icon doesn't need too much detail we can simulate a coil by making a wavy line. So once again select the Bezier curves tool and draw four points between the V lines created earlier. Then drag the lines connecting each point downwards so we have three shallow bowls connected together.
A lit light bulb indicates that the page is checked out to you. This indicates that the page is checked out to you, the logged-in user. Only one user can have a page checked out at a time, and only the user to whom the page is checked out or an administrator can check a page back in. Check out a page to prevent others from entering conflicting changes while you are working. Click the lightbulb icon to check a file in or out.
A grayed-out calendar icon is the status indicator for a scheduled publish. The calendar icon can be clicked on by an administrator or the individual who scheduled the page to be published in order to change the publish date and time or to cancel the publish completely.
A thumbs up icon indicates that the page is checked out to you as part of the workflow process. The page has been sent by another user for approval and should be reviewed for accuracy and completeness prior to being published.
The following list of Esri Icon Fonts display a preview of the font, the CSS class name required to use the icon font, and the CSS unicodevalue necessary to specify the content CSS property used with the ::beforeand ::after pseudo-elements to generate content in an element or the value of theTextSymbol.text property.
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