where to download the new jira priority icons

Tobbe May 3, 2015

Hi

I have looked through the images folder but I cant find the new new priority icon set. the one that goes from red to grey.

https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/JIRA/Defining+Priority+Field+Values?preview=/185729602/689570653/JIRAEAP6.4Priorities.png

 

is there somewhere I can dowenload them?

2 answers

2 votes
Shawn Thiel May 6, 2015

I created my own icons - word art in powerpoint or word, then saved as an image.  I then loaded those images to a project ticket.  This gave me a url that I could use for each priority.  

Matt Leavitt September 12, 2017

Inspired idea to post the images in an issue.  Then click on the image to view it and right-click to save the file location.  Then use that in the Priorities as the "Icon URL".  Great idea, and I used it myself, thanks!

Amit M Patil July 5, 2018

Very smart! I used it as well. Thank you

Brittony Lovell April 23, 2019

Thank you! This worked perfectly!

0 votes
Nic Brough -Adaptavist-
Community Leader
Community Leader
Community Leaders are connectors, ambassadors, and mentors. On the online community, they serve as thought leaders, product experts, and moderators.
May 3, 2015

They're not icons, they're css formatted text.

If you look at the html, you get class=" jira-issue-status-lozenge aui-lozenge jira-issue-status-lozenge-green jira-issue-status-lozenge-done aui-lozenge-subtle jira-issue-status-lozenge-max-width-medium"

Tobbe May 4, 2015

Thanks but where do you mean I found find that in the html? Since I dont have the css 'icons' in my installation I cant see the html code for that. And how can I put this css code instead of icons? is it in the url for the icon in the 'edit' view of the priority?

Nic Brough -Adaptavist-
Community Leader
Community Leader
Community Leaders are connectors, ambassadors, and mentors. On the online community, they serve as thought leaders, product experts, and moderators.
May 4, 2015

There are no icons. There's css that says "when I find tag X around a word, draw it this way". When you look at a page that has a status on it, that's html, and your browser is drawing it as instructed. If you use ctrl-u to look at the plain unformatted html, you get the class stuff I mentioned wrapped around a word. To re-use it, you'll need to replicate what the the css says to draw the word out.

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