Command line utility to export colors, typography, icons and images from Figma to Xcode / Android Studio project.
- color - Figma's color style
- typography - Figma's text style
- icon — Figma's component with small black/colorized vector image
- image — Figma's components with colorized image (Light/Dark)
The utility supports Dark Mode, SwiftUI and Jetpack Compose.
Why we've developed this utility:
- Figma doesn't support exporting colors and images to Xcode / Android Studio. Manual export takes a long time.
- For easy sync of the component library with the code
Articles:
Table of Contents:
- Features
- Result
- Installation
- Usage
- Design requirements
- Example project
- Contributing
- License
- Feedback
- Authors
- Export light & dark color palette directly to Xcode / Android studio project
- Export icons to Xcode / Android Studio project
- Export images to Xcode / Android Studio project
- Export text styles to Xcode / Android Studio project
- Supports Dark Mode
- Supports High contrast colors for Xcode
- Supports SwiftUI and UIKit
- Supports Objective-C
- Supports RTL
Exporting icons and images works only for Professional/Organisation Figma plan because FigmaExport use Shareable team libraries.
When your execute figma-export colors
command, figma-export
exports colors from Figma directly to your Xcode project to the Assets.xcassets folder.
Figma light | Figma dark | Xcode |
---|---|---|
Additionally, the following Swift file will be created to use colors from the code.
import UIKit
extension UIColor {
static var backgroundSecondaryError: UIColor { return UIColor(named: #function)! }
static var backgroundSecondarySuccess: UIColor { return UIColor(named: #function)! }
static var backgroundVideo: UIColor { return UIColor(named: #function)! }
...
}
For SwiftUI the following Swift file will be created to use colors from the code.
import SwiftUI
extension Color {
static var backgroundSecondaryError: Color { return Color(#function) }
static var backgroundSecondarySuccess: Color { return Color(#function) }
static var backgroundVideo: Color { return Color(#function) }
...
}
If you set option useColorAssets: False
in the configuration file, then will be generated code like this:
UIKit:
import UIKit
extension UIColor {
static var primaryText: UIColor {
if #available(iOS 13.0, *) {
return UIColor { traitCollection -> UIColor in
if traitCollection.userInterfaceStyle == .dark {
return UIColor(red: 0.000, green: 0.000, blue: 0.000, alpha: 1.000)
} else {
return UIColor(red: 1.000, green: 1.000, blue: 1.000, alpha: 1.000)
}
}
} else {
return UIColor(red: 1.000, green: 1.000, blue: 1.000, alpha: 1.000)
}
}
static var backgroundVideo: UIColor {
return UIColor(red: 0.467, green: 0.012, blue: 1.000, alpha: 0.500)
}
}
SwiftUI:
import SwiftUI
public extension ShapeStyle where Self == Color {
static var primaryText: Color { Color(red: 1.000, green: 1.000, blue: 1.000, opacity: 1.000) }
}
Icons will be exported as PDF or SVG files with Template Image
render mode.
Additionally, the following Swift file will be created to use icons from the code.
import UIKit
extension UIImage {
static var ic16Notification: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
static var ic24ArrowRight: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
static var ic24Close: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
static var ic24Dots: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
...
}
For SwiftUI the following Swift file will be created to use images from the code.
import SwiftUI
extension Image {
static var ic16Notification: Image { return Image(#function) }
static var ic24Close: Image { return Image(#function) }
static var ic24DropdownDown: Image { return Image(#function) }
static var ic24DropdownUp: Image { return Image(#function) }
...
}
...
VStack {
Image.ic24Close
Image.ic24DropdownDown
}
...
Images will be exported as PNG files the same way.
Additionally, the following Swift file will be created to use images from the code.
import UIKit
extension UIImage {
static var illZeroEmpty: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
static var illZeroNetworkError: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
static var illZeroServerError: UIImage { return UIImage(named: #function)! }
...
}
For SwiftUI a Swift file will be created to use images from the code.
If name of an image contains idiom at the end (e.g. ~ipad), it will be exported like this:
When your execute figma-export typography
command figma-export
generates 3 files:
UIFont+extension.swift
extension for UIFont that declares your custom fonts. Use these fonts like thisUIFont.header()
,UIFont.caption1()
.LabelStyle.swift
struct for generating attributes for NSAttributesString with custom lineHeight and tracking (letter spacing).Label.swift
file that contains base Label class and class for each text style. E.g. HeaderLabel, BodyLabel, Caption1Label. Specify these classes in xib files on in code.
Example of these files:
- ./Examples/Example/UIComponents/Source/Typography/Label.swift
- ./Examples/Example/UIComponents/Source/Typography/LabelStyle.swift
- ./Examples/Example/UIComponents/Source/Typography/UIFont+extension.swift
Colors will be exported to values/colors.xml
and values-night/colors.xml
files.
For Jetpack Compose, following code will be generated, if configured:
package com.redmadrobot.androidcomposeexample.ui.figmaexport
import ...
object Colors
@Composable
@ReadOnlyComposable
fun Colors.backgroundPrimary(): Color = colorResource(id = R.color.background_primary)
Icons will be exported to drawable
directory as vector xml files. For Jetpack Compose, following code will be generated, if configured:
package com.redmadrobot.androidcomposeexample.ui.figmaexport
import ...
object Icons
@Composable
fun Icons.Ic24DropdownDown(
contentDescription: String?,
modifier: Modifier = Modifier,
tint: Color = Color.Unspecified
) {
Icon(
painter = painterResource(id = R.drawable.ic_24_dropdown_down),
contentDescription = contentDescription,
modifier = modifier,
tint = tint
)
}
Vector images will be exported to drawable
and drawable-night
directories as vector xml
files.
Raster images will be exported to drawable-???dpi
and drawable-night-???dpi
directories as png
or webp
files.
Typography will be exported to values/typography.xml
. For Jetpack Compose, following code will be generated, if configured:
package com.redmadrobot.androidcomposeexample.ui.figmaexport
import ...
object Typography {
val body = TextStyle(
fontFamily = FontFamily(Font(R.font.ptsans_regular)),
fontSize = 16.0.sp,
letterSpacing = 0.0.sp,
lineHeight = 24.0.sp,
)
}
Before installation you must provide Figma personal access token via environment variables.
export FIGMA_PERSONAL_TOKEN=value
This token gives you access to the Figma API. Generate a personal Access Token through your user profile page or on Figma API documentation website. If you use Fastlane just add the following line to fastlane/.env
file
FIGMA_PERSONAL_TOKEN=value
Download the latest release and read Usage
brew install RedMadRobot/formulae/figma-export
If you want to export raster images in WebP format install cwebp command line utility.
brew install webp
Add the following line to your Podfile:
pod 'FigmaExport'
This will download the FigmaExport binaries and dependencies in Pods/
during your next
pod install
execution and will allow you to invoke it via Pods/FigmaExport/Release/figma-export
in your Fastfile.
Add the following line to your Fastfile:
lane :sync_colors do
Dir.chdir("../") do
sh "Pods/FigmaExport/Release/figma-export colors ."
end
end
Don't forget to place figma-export.yaml file at the root of the project directory.
Run fastlane sync_colors
to run FigmaExport.
-
Open
Terminal.app
-
Go (cd) to the folder with
figma-export
binary file -
Run
figma-export
To export colors use
colors
argument:./figma-export colors -i figma-export.yaml
To export icons use
icons
argument:./figma-export icons -i figma-export.yaml
To export images use
images
argument:./figma-export images -i figma-export.yaml
To export typography use
typography
argument:./figma-export typography -i figma-export.yaml
In the figma-export.yaml
file you must specify the following properties:
android.mainRes
android.resourcePackage
if you want to generate Jetpack Compose codeandroid.mainSrc
if you want to generate Jetpack Compose codeandroid.icons.output
if you want to export iconsandroid.images.output
if you want to export images
When you execute figma-export icons
command, FigmaExport clears the {android.mainRes}/{android.icons.output}
directory before exporting all the icons.
When you execute figma-export images
command, FigmaExport clears the {android.mainRes}/{android.images.output}
directory before exporting all the images.
Example folder structure:
main/
res/
figma-export-icons/
drawable/
drawable-night/
figma-export-images/
drawable/
drawable-night/
Before first running figma-export
you must add path to these directories in the app‘s build.gradle
file.
...
android {
...
sourceSets {
main {
res.srcDirs += "src/main/res/figma-export-icons"
res.srcDirs += "src/main/res/figma-export-images"
}
}
}
For Typography, Colors and Icons you can enable code generation for the use with Jetpack Compose in your config file:
- Configure
android.mainSrc
- Configure
android.[typography|colors|icons].composePackageName
If you want to export specific colors/icons/images you can list their names in the last argument like this:
./figma-export icons "ic/24/edit"
— Exports only one icon.
./figma-export icons "ic/24/edit, ic/16/notification"
— Exports two icons
./figma-export icons "ic/24/videoplayer/*"
— Exports all icons which names starts with ic/24/videoplayer/
./figma-export colors "common/*"
— Exports all the colors which names starts with common
./figma-export colors
— Exports all the colors.
Argument -i
or -input
specifies path to FigmaExport configuration file figma-export.yaml
.
All available configuration options described in the CONFIG.md file.
Example of figma-export.yaml
file for iOS project — Examples/Example/figma-export.yaml
Example of figma-export.yaml
file for Android project — Examples/AndroidExample/figma-export.yaml
Generate figma-export.yaml
config file using one of the following command:
figma-export init --platform android
figma-export init --platform ios
It will generate config file in the current directory.
FigmaExport uses Stencil and StencilSwiftKit to generate code.
If you want to modify structure of the generated *.swift
files you should specify a directory (ios.templatesPath
) where Stencil templates are located. If ios.templatesPath
not specified default templates will be used.
Default Stencil templates for iOS located here: ./Sources/XcodeExport/Resources
Custom Stencil templates for colors and images must have the following names:
- UIColor+extension.swift.stencil for UIKit colors
- Color+extension.swift.stencil for SwiftUI colors
- UIImage+extension.swift.stencil for UIKit images
- Image+extension.swift.stencil for SwiftUI images
Custom Stencil templates for typography must have the following names:
- Label.swift.stencil,
- LabelStyle.swift.stencil,
- LabelStyle+extension.swift.stencil,
- UIFont+extension.swift.stencil
- Font+extension.swift.stencil.stencil
If you want to modify structure of the generated .xml
, .kt
files you should specify a directory (android.templatesPath
) where Stencil templates are located. If android.templatesPath
not specified default templates will be used.
Defaul Stencil templates for Android located here: ./Sources/AndroidExport/Resources
Custom Stencil templates must have the following names:
- colors.xml.stencil
- Colors.kt.stencil
- Icons.kt.stencil
- typography.xml.stencil
- Typography.kt.stencil
- Add a custom font to the Xcode project. Drag & drop font file to the Xcode project, set target membership, and add font file name in the Info.plist file. See developer documentation for more info.
- Run
figma-export typography
to export text styles - Use generated fonts and labels in your code. E.g.
button.titleLabel?.font = UIFont.body()
,let label = HeaderLabel()
.
- Place font file under the
res
directory of your module - Run
figma-export typography
to export text styles - Create a top level style as a parent for the generated styles. For example:
<style name="FigmaExport.TextAppearance" parent="Widget.AppCompat">
</style>
- Use the generated styles in your code
If a color, icon or image is unique for iOS or Android platform, it should contains "ios" or "android" word in the description field in the properties. If a color, icon or image is used only by the designer, and it should not be exported, the word "none" should be specified in the description field.
If an icon supports RTL, it should contains "rtl" word in the description field in the properties.
Styles and Components must be published to a Team Library.
For figma-export colors
By default, if you support dark mode your Figma project must contains two files. One should contains a dark color palette, and the another light color palette. If you would like to specify light and dark colors in the same file, you can do so with the useSingleFile
configuration option. You can then denote dark mode colors by adding a suffix like _dark
. The suffix is also configurable. See CONFIG.md for more information in the colors section.
If you support high contrast mode without dark mode your Figma project must contains two files. One should contains a high contrast color palette, and the another light color palette. If you would like to specify light and high contrast colors in the same file, you can do so with the useSingleFile
configuration option. You can then denote high contrast mode colors by adding a suffix like _lightHC
. The suffix is also configurable. See CONFIG.md for more information in the colors section.
If you support high contrast mode with dark mode your Figma project must contains four files. Should be like this: light, dark, high contrast light, high contrast dark. If you would like to specify colors in the same file, you can do so with the useSingleFile
configuration option. You can then denote high contrast mode colors by adding a suffix like _lightHC
for light and _darkHC
for dark high contrast colors. The suffix is also configurable. See CONFIG.md for more information in the colors section.
The light color palette may contain more colors than the dark or high light color palette wherein the dark color palette may contain more colors than the high dark color palette. If a light-only color is present, it will be considered as universal color for the iOS color palette. Names of the dark, high light and high dark colors must match the light colors.
Example
File | Styles |
---|---|
For figma-export icons
By default, your Figma file should contains a frame with Icons
name which contains components for each icon. You may change a frame name in a CONFIG.md file by setting common.icons.figmaFrameName
property.
If you support dark mode and want separate icons for dark mode, Figma project must contains two files. One should contains a dark icons, and another light icons. If you would like to have light and dark icons in the same file, you can do so with the useSingleFile
configuration option. You can then denote dark mode icons by adding a suffix like _dark
. The suffix is also configurable. See CONFIG.md for more information in the icons section.
For figma-export images
Your Figma file should contains a frame with Illustrations
name which contains components for each illustration. You may change a frame name in a CONFIG.md file by setting common.images.figmaFrameName
property.
If you support dark mode you must have two Figma files. The rules for these two files follow the same rules as described above for colors. But If you would like to specify light and dark illustrations in the same file, you can do so with the useSingleFile
configuration option. You can then denote dark mode illustrations by adding a suffix like _dark
. The suffix is also configurable. See CONFIG.md for more information in the illustrations section.
If you want to specify image variants for different devices (iPhone, iPad, Mac etc.), add an extra ~
mark with idiom name. For example add ~ipad
postfix:
For figma-export typography
.
Your Figma file must contains Text Styles.
It is recommended to support Dynamic Type. Dynamic Type provides additional flexibility by letting readers choose their preferred text size.
If you want to support Dynamic Type you should specify iOS native text style for your custom text styles in the description field of Text Style. Available iOS native text styles you can find on Human Interface Guidlines page in Typography/Dynamic Type Sizes.
For example: You have header
text style with 20 pt font size. Native iOS text style that matches is "Title 3". In the description field of your header
text style you should specify "Title 3".
Advice: Font in Tab Bar and standard Navigation Bar must not support Dynamic Type.
Example iOS projects, Android projects and example Figma files see in the Examples folder
We'd love to accept your pull requests to this project.
figma-export is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.
If you have any issues with the FigmaExport or you want some new features feel free to create an issue, open a discussion or contact me.
Daniil Subbotin - [email protected]