All the other code is my own work and is licensed under the MIT License. The icons were not made by me - they are the property of Skype and should be used according to their license and usage terms. For example, I feel the following emotions don't warrant different icons: The Emoji set is popular but doesn't offer animation and has an over-whelming number of options. I think other emoticons available today fail in at least one of these criteria. accurate expression/emotion captured ( avoids miscommojication).The Skype team really hits a sweet spot in the set of icons they offer, achieving all of the following: Not to mention they aren't driven by the community and don't appear easy to maintain or to scale well. There are many sites around the web that also catalog the emoticons and flags that are available in Skype, (especially for the popular hidden ones), however, none show the icons in their best potential quality (both in resolution and smoothness in the animation) of how they are shown within the Skype application. This library was created with the utmost respect for the people responsible for the icons at Skype and exists to properly showcase their work (while allowing some flexibility in its demonstration as well). sc-2x - Shows the icon at twice the size (40px).sc-still - prevents the animation (will override sc-hover).Then alter its behavior with at most one option from each set: But if you want some documentation, here ya go: define an HTML tag with a class of sc and one sc- type. You're better off playing around with the different options. ![]() ![]() The usage is web-friendly and leverages all the webby things we love like CSS for animations, retina support, etc. A library enabling the Skypecon catalog site to showcase all the Skype icons in their full, native quality.
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