Tyler Sticka digs in here in the best possible way: by making a test page and literally measuring performance. Maybe 1,000 icons is a little bit of an edge case, but hey, 250 rows of data with four icons in each gets you there. Tyler covers the nuances carefully in the post. The different techniques tested: inline <svg>
, same-document sprite <symbol>
s, external-document sprite <symbol>
s, <img>
with an external source, <img>
with a data URL, <img>
with a filter
, <div>
with a background-image
of an external source, <div>
with a background-image
of a data URL, and a <div>
with a mask
. Phew! That’s a lot — and they are all useful techniques in their own right.
Which technique won? Inline <svg>
, unless the SVGs are rather complex, then <img>
is better. That’s what I would have put my money on. I’ve been on that train for a while now.
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source https://css-tricks.com/which-svg-technique-performs-best-for-way-too-many-icons/
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