Node-spritesheet is a utility to create sprite sheets in node.js. Its original intention was to be used as a Grunt task, but I decided it was worth abstracting further.
In the most part, it is an indirect port of Jake Gordon's much more mature Sprite Factory for Ruby.
It will also handle auto-resizing of images for specified pixel densities. No more fart-arsing about for retina displays, just supply the largest (highest-density) image. By default, this uses ImageMagick's version of the Lanczos and Mitchell algorithms, depending on the most appropriate, but you can specify any of the 20-odd available.
You're not locked in to auto-resampling though, you can supply multiple density versions of the same image, if you prefer.
Additionally, it will add the relevant cross-browser media queries to the CSS.
Requires ImageMagick. For Unix/Mac, this will be installed automagickally (ouch).
npm install node-spritesheet
var Builder = require( 'node-spritesheet' ).Builder;
var b = new Builder( options );
b.build( callback );
Takes in a series of images a generates a spritesheet.
var Builder = require( 'node-spritesheet' ).Builder;
var builder = new Builder({
outputDirectory: '/path/to/directory',
outputImage: 'sprite.png',
outputCss: 'sprite.css',
selector: '.sprite',
images: [ 'image1.png', 'image2.png', image3.png' ]
});
builder.build( function() {
console.log( "Built from " + builder.images.length + " images" );
});
Add configurations to the builder to output multiple spritesheets based on different pixel densities, using media queries.
var Builder = require( 'node-spritesheet' ).Builder;
var builder = new Builder({
outputDirectory: '/path/to/directory',
outputCss: 'sprite.css',
selector: '.sprite',
images: [ 'image1.png', 'image2.png', image3.png' ]
});
builder.addConfiguration( "legacy", {
pixelRatio: 1,
outputImage: 'sprite.png'
});
builder.addConfiguration( "retina", {
pixelRatio: 2,
outputImage: 'sprite@2x.png'
});
builder.build( function() {
console.log( "Built from " + builder.images.length + " images" );
});
Even though ImageMagick uses some pretty decent algorithms for resampling images, you may not want node-spritesheet to automatically resize your retina versions for you, you may want to instead keep two copies of each image.
var Builder = require( 'node-spritesheet' ).Builder;
var builder = new Builder({
outputDirectory: '/path/to/directory',
outputCss: 'sprite.css',
selector: '.sprite'
});
builder.addConfiguration( "legacy", {
pixelRatio: 1,
outputImage: 'sprite.png',
images: [ 'image1.png', 'image2.png', image3.png' ]
});
builder.addConfiguration( "retina", {
pixelRatio: 2,
outputImage: 'sprite@2x.png',
images: [ 'image1@2x.png', 'image2@2x.png', image3@2x.png' ]
});
builder.build( function() {
console.log( "Built from " + builder.images.length + " images" );
});
This is a multi-task, supporting multiple spritesheets in one gruntfile.
The following grunt.js structure takes all images in src/icons and creates a spritesheet at bin/assets/sprite.png, with an accompanying stylesheet at bin/assets/sprite.css.
// Add to your grunt config.
spritesheet: {
compile: {
options: {
// Compiles to bin/assets/images/spritesheets/flags.png
outputImage: 'images/spritesheets/flags.png',
// Compiles to bin/assets/stylesheets/flags.css
outputCss: 'stylesheets/flags.css',
// Uses this compound selector in the css, e.g. '.flag.my-image {}'
selector: '.flag'
},
files: {
'bin/assets': 'src/icons/flags/*'
}
}
}
// Add to your imports.
loadNpmTasks( 'node-spritesheet' );
This adds retina/legacy support, and resamples the images (assuming the highest density has been supplied).
// Add to your grunt config.
spritesheet: {
compile: {
options: {
outputCss: 'sprite.css',
selector: '.sprite',
// Optional ImageMagick sampling filter.
downsampling: "LanczosSharp",
// Output configurations: in this instance to output two sprite sheets,
// one for "legacy" (i.e. 72dpi, pixel ratio 1), and "retina" (x2).
// These keys (legacy, retina) are completely arbitrary.
output: {
legacy: {
pixelRatio: 1,
outputImage: 'sprite.png'
},
// As the retina scheme has the highest pixel ratio, it will be
// assumed that all images passed to the builder are for 'retina',
// and will be downscaled for 'legacy'.
retina: {
pixelRatio: 2,
outputImage: 'sprite@2x.png'
}
},
// Allows you to augment your selector names for each image, based on
// the bare image "name", or the full image path.
resolveImageSelector: function( name, fullpath ) {
// For example, your files may well already be named with @2x, but
// you won't want that included in your CSS selectors.
return name.split( "@2x" ).join( "" );
}
},
files: {
'bin/assets': 'src/icons/flags/*'
}
}
}
// Add to your imports.
loadNpmTasks( 'node-spritesheet' );
Again, this adds retina/legacy support, but uses a filter function to ascertain which images are retina and which aren't, meaning you don't have to rely on the resampling option, if you want finer control.
// Add to your grunt config.
spritesheet: {
compile: {
options: {
outputCss: 'sprite.css',
selector: '.sprite',
output: {
legacy: {
pixelRatio: 1,
outputImage: 'sprite.png',
// Just process the non-retina files
filter: function( fullpath ) {
return fullpath.indexOf( "@2x" ) === -1;
}
},
retina: {
pixelRatio: 2,
outputImage: 'sprite@2x.png',
// Just process the retina files
filter: function( fullpath ) {
return fullpath.indexOf( "@2x" ) >= 0;
}
}
}
},
files: {
'bin/assets': 'src/icons/flags/*'
}
}
}
// Add to your imports.
loadNpmTasks( 'node-spritesheet' );