Detect if the browser is using dark mode and use a different favicon

Google ChromeBrowser

Google Chrome Problem Overview


Google Chrome 73 has been released, and it adds "dark mode" support to the browser. I notice that a lot of favicons look bad now.

Dark mode Wikimedia Foundation tab screenshot

Dark mode Codecademy tab screenshot

Is there a way to detect if the user is using dark mode and change the favicon?

Google Chrome Solutions


Solution 1 - Google Chrome

Adding and removing an icon from the document’s head works in Firefox but not Safari:

Chrome is still implementing (prefers-color-scheme: dark), so the jury’s still out. https://crbug.com/889087. In Chrome 76 with --enable-blink-features=MediaQueryPrefersColorScheme, this correctly sets the icon when the page is loaded, but does not respond dynamically to changes in dark mode.

Safari adds a grey background to dark icons in dark mode (for example, Wikimedia Foundation, Github), so this workaround isn't necessary for legibility.

  1. Add two link rel=icon elements with ids for later:

     <link rel="icon" href="a.png" id="light-scheme-icon">
     <link rel="icon" href="b.png" id="dark-scheme-icon">
    
  2. Create a CSS media matcher:

     matcher = window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)');
     matcher.addListener(onUpdate);
     onUpdate();
    
  3. Add/remove the elements from the document's head:

     lightSchemeIcon = document.querySelector('link#light-scheme-icon');
     darkSchemeIcon = document.querySelector('link#dark-scheme-icon');
    
     function onUpdate() {
       if (matcher.matches) {
         lightSchemeIcon.remove();
         document.head.append(darkSchemeIcon);
       } else {
         document.head.append(lightSchemeIcon);
         darkSchemeIcon.remove();
       }
     }
    

Solution 2 - Google Chrome

CSS has a theme mode detection using prefers-color-scheme media feature:

@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
  ...
}

With that in mind, nowadays you can use an SVG as a favicon for your website:

<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.svg" type="image/svg+xml">

Then you can update the SVG favicon design using the CSS prefers-color-scheme media feature. Below is an SVG rectangle with rounded corners, which has a different color, depending on the active theme:

<svg width="50" height="50" viewBox="0 0 50 50" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
  <style>
    rect {
      fill: green;
    }
    @media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
      rect {
        fill: red;
      }
    }
  </style>
  <rect width="50" height="50" rx="5"/>
</svg>

Now, considering the current browser support for the SVG favicon, a fallback is required for the older browsers:

<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.svg" type="image/svg+xml">
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.png" type="image/png">
<!-- favicon.ico in the root -->

From https://catalin.red/svg-favicon-light-dark-theme/

Here's a demo too: https://codepen.io/catalinred/pen/vYOERwL

Solution 3 - Google Chrome

To make it a little more generic than Josh's answer, try this whilst the browsers still get around to implementing media natively. (Notice no hardcoded number of themes, ids, or media-queries in the JS; it's all kept in the HTML.)

<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico?light" media="(prefers-color-scheme:no-preference)">
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico?dark"  media="(prefers-color-scheme:dark)">
<link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico?light" media="(prefers-color-scheme:light)">

$(document).ready(function() {
    if (!window.matchMedia)
        return;

    var current = $('head > link[rel="icon"][media]');
    $.each(current, function(i, icon) {
        var match = window.matchMedia(icon.media);
        function swap() {
            if (match.matches) {
                current.remove();
                current = $(icon).appendTo('head');
            }
        }
        match.addListener(swap);
        swap();
    });
});

The upshot is that once that attribute is supported, you just need to remove the Javascript and it'll still work.

I deliberately split /favicon.ico?light into two tags instead of a single one with media="(prefers-color-scheme: no-preference), (prefers-color-scheme:light)" because some browsers that don't support media permanently pick the first rel="icon" they see… and others pick the last!

Solution 4 - Google Chrome

The easiest option is to change the source when you change the mode on your computer.

var element = document.querySelector("link[rel='icon']");
const darkModeListener = (event) => {
if (event.matches) {
  console.log("dark");
  element.setAttribute("href","img/favicon-dark.svg");
} else {
  console.log("light");
  element.setAttribute("href","img/favicon-light.svg");
}
};

// Update favicon on Mode change 
window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)').addEventListener('change', darkModeListener);

// Check Mode on load
if (window.matchMedia && window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme:      dark)').matches) {
  element.setAttribute("href","img/favicon-dark.svg");
} else {
  element.setAttribute("href","img/favicon-light.svg");
}
 

But if you have a multi-device favicon then you need to do something like this ...

// Switch Favicon on Dark/Light Mode
        let colorSchemeQueryList = window.matchMedia('(prefers-color-scheme: dark)');
            const setColorScheme = e => {
              if (e.matches) {
                // Dark
                var favicon = document.querySelectorAll('link[data-type="favicon"]');
                var i = favicon.length;
                while (i--) {              
                  favicon[i].setAttribute('href', favicon[i].dataset.dark);
                }
              } else {
                // Light
                var favicon = document.querySelectorAll('link[data-type="favicon"]');
                var i = favicon.length;
                while (i--) {              
                  favicon[i].setAttribute("href", favicon[i].dataset.light);
                }
              }
            }
           
           setColorScheme(colorSchemeQueryList);
           colorSchemeQueryList.addListener(setColorScheme);

<link rel="apple-touch-icon" sizes="180x180" href="Images/favicon/light/apple-touch-icon.png" data-type="favicon" data-light="Images/favicon/light/apple-touch-icon.png" data-dark="Images/favicon/dark/apple-touch-icon.png">
  <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="32x32" href="Images/favicon/light/favicon-32x32.png" data-type="favicon" data-light="Images/favicon/light/favicon-32x32.png" data-dark="Images/favicon/dark/favicon-32x32.png">
  <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="16x16" href="Images/favicon/light/favicon-16x16.png" data-type="favicon" data-light="Images/favicon/light/favicon-16x16.png" data-dark="Images/favicon/dark/favicon-16x16.png">
  <link rel="favicon" href="Images/favicon/light/site.webfavicon" data-type="favicon" data-light="Images/favicon/light/site.webfavicon" data-dark="Images/favicon/dark/site.webfavicon">
  <link rel="mask-icon" href="Images/favicon/light/safari-pinned-tab.svg" color="#000000" data-type="favicon" data-light="Images/favicon/light/safari-pinned-tab.svg" data-dark="Images/favicon/dark/safari-pinned-tab.svg">

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionagustinView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Google ChromeJosh LeeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Google ChromeRedView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Google ChromeHashbrownView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Google ChromeGaius Galerius Valerius MaximiView Answer on Stackoverflow