Favicon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A favicon (short for "favorites icon"), also known as a page icon or an urlicon, is an icon associated with a particular website or webpage. A web designer can create such an icon, and many recent web browsers can then make use of them. Browsers that support favicons may display them in the browser's URL bar, next to the site's name in lists of bookmarks, and next to the page's title in a tabbed document interface.
The original means of defining a favicon was by placing a file called favicon.ico in the root directory of a webserver. This would then automatically be used in Internet Explorer's favorites (bookmarks) display. Later, however, a more flexible system was created, using (X)HTML to indicate the location of an icon for any given page. This is achieved by adding two link elements in the <head>
section of the document as detailed below. In this way, any appropriately sized (16×16 pixels or larger) image can be used, and although many still use the ICO format, other browsers now also support the animated GIF and PNG image formats.
Most modern browsers implement both methods. Because of this, web servers receive many requests for the file "favicon.ico" even if it doesn't exist. This may annoy web server administrators by creating many server log entries, and unnecessarily loading the disk, CPU, and network. Another common problem is that the favicons may disappear if the browser's cache is emptied.
Originally, Internet Explorer only used favicons for bookmarks, which created a minor privacy concern in that a site owner could tell how many people had bookmarked their site by checking the access logs to see how many people downloaded the favicon.ico file. However, since newer versions of Internet Explorer and most other browsers also display the favicon in the address bar on every visit, that concern may no longer be relevant.
[edit] Guidelines
To ensure that the favicon does indeed appear, various measures are taken by webmasters:
- It has been suggested that both of the following HTML lines should be included:
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico" type="image/vnd.microsoft.icon" />
<link rel="icon" href="http://example.com/favicon.ico" type="image/vnd.microsoft.icon" />
- However, only the former is necessary, as "shortcut icon" will be treated as a list of possibilities by standards-compliant browsers (with "shortcut" being ignored, and "icon" used); while Internet Explorer will treat it as a single name ("shortcut icon"). The result is that all browsers understand the code. It is only necessary to include a second piece of code if one desires to offer an alternative image to modern browsers (e.g. an animated GIF).
- The
link
elements must be inside thehead
element (between<head>
and</head>
) in the HTML. - For XHTML, the link element must be terminated by "
/>
" instead of ">
". - The
href
can, but need not, point to the location/favicon.ico
. It could equally well point anywhere else on your site that is convenient. - The image can usually be in any image format supported by the web browser, the major exception being Internet Explorer, which only supports ICO.
- The
.ico
file format will be read correctly by all browsers that can display favicons. - Configure the webserver to send the correct MIME identifier:
- ICO files
image/vnd.microsoft.icon
(Alternatively,image/x-icon
can be used instead, for compatibility reasons. However, it is preferable to use the IANA-registered standard MIME type, as most major browsers now support it.) - GIF files
image/gif
- PNG files
image/png
- ICO files
- Use the appropriate resolution and color depth.
- ICO: include multiple resolutions (the most commonly used being 16×16 and 32×32, with 64×64 and 128×128 sometimes used by Mac OS X) and bit-depths (most common being 4, 8, 24 bpp—i.e. 16, 256 and 16 million colors) in the file.
- GIF: use 16×16 in 256 colors.
- PNG: use 16×16 in either 256 colors or 24-bit.
Note: A file called favicon.ico
and located in the document root directory will also be found by some browsers that do not process the link
elements, even if it is not linked from anywhere on your site.
[edit] Standardization
The original favicon feature was created by Microsoft, and Microsoft's Internet Explorer web browser would request a favicon from a set URL (/favicon.ico) on every website. Microsoft's supported format for the link tag did not conform to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) HTML recommendation[1] because:
- The
rel
attribute must contain a space-delimited list of link types, so a two-word link type would not be understood correctly by conforming web browsers. - The ".ico" file format (a raster format used for icons on Microsoft Windows) did not have a registered MIME type, and wasn't likely to be automatically understood by most web browsers. In 2003, however, the format was registered with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) under the MIME type image/vnd.microsoft.icon, eliminating the first part of this problem.
- The use of a reserved location on a website conflicts with the Architecture of the World Wide Web, and is known as link squatting or URI squatting.
The Mozilla web browser added support for favicons, in a way that conformed to web standards: the use of rel="icon"
and let web designers add favicons in any supported graphics format. e.g. <link rel="icon" type="image/png" href="/path/image.png">
. Most web browsers have since added support for this feature, which should be used for all new content.
[edit] External links
- How to add a Favicon - Proposals with the W3C web standards organisation
- Antifavicon - An online tool to create a favicon in seconds starting from some text.
- MSDN Library: Icons in Win32, Icons in XP
- peerbot favicon search engine
- Favicon support chart- Detailed favicon behaviour and functionality by browser, version and platform
- Favicon Battle - Favicon design and usability poll.
- Favorites Icon tutorial - Includes the web-safe 16-color palette