A Progressive Web App requires a web app manifest, a JSON file that contains the details of your app (things like the name and icons of your PWA).
An app manifest must have an array of icons. Each of these icons has a purpose set to either monochrome
, any
ormaskable
or a combination of these three values.
Why is "any maskable" discouraged by Chrome?
Lately, I've noticed quite a few PWA app manifests displaying a warning that until mid-2021 didn't exist (those created with Progressier always work great though!):
Declaring an icon with purpose "any maskable" is discouraged. It is likely to look incorrect on some platforms due to too much or too little padding.
{
…
"icons": [
{
"src": "icon2.png",
"sizes": "512x512",
"type": "image/png",
"purpose": "any maskable" // <-- triggers the warning
}
],
…
}
In this article, I'll show you exactly what Chrome means with that warning, but first I must explain what maskable icons
are and why they exist.
What are maskable
icons?
Until a few years ago, app icons on Android could have a transparent background and use any shape they wanted. And that frankly made your home screen quite messy. Look at that Samsung Galaxy Note 4 from 2014:
Since then, smartphone vendors — probably in an effort to emulate iOS — standardized app icons. On a given home screen, every app icon has the same size and shape.
Samsung Galaxy Note S21+ (Square icons with rounded corners) vs Google Pixel 6 (circular icons)
Thankfully, the W3C folks came up with the maskable icon feature. A maskable icon is one that has a safe zone that is cropped so that the icon can be displayed within a variety of shapes and occupy the entire space available.
(I say "thankfully" because just imagine the mess it would have become if developers had to provide a different icon for each possible shape.)
Difference between any
and maskable
Here is how a Android home screen renders the same PNG image with the purpose set to maskable
(left) and set to any
(right)
So why no any maskable
icons?
In short, it's because it's very difficult to create an app icon that can be used as-is and as a mask. You'll almost always either have too much or too little padding.
The perfect solution
Use Progressier to have icons perfectly sized automatically. Else to do it manually, create two 512x512 icons, one with the purpose maskable
, and the other with the purpose any
. Make your maskable
icon fit the entirety of the area. And give your any
icon 40 pixels of padding and 20% of border-radius (so that it looks great on all macOS versions).
{
…
"icons": [
{
"src": "icon2.png",
"sizes": "512x512",
"type": "image/png",
"purpose": "any"
},
{
"src": "icon2.png",
"sizes": "512x512",
"type": "image/png",
"purpose": "maskable"
},
],
…
}
Where do my PWA icons show?
Different platforms will use either of the two icons.
- On Android, the home screen and install prompt use the icon with the purpose
maskable
- The splash screen generated by recent Android phones (post 2020) uses the icon with the purpose
maskable
- Older or low-end Android phones may have a splash screen generated from the icon with the purpose
any
instead. -
Chrome OS uses the icon with the purpose
maskable
-
Windows uses the icon with the purpose
any
with all browsers, as it does not enforce any particular icon shapes -
macOS Ventura or lower uses the icon with the purpose
any
-
macOS Sonoma or higher uses the icon with the purpose
maskable
-
iOS requires an extra set of icons set with the
apple-touch-icon
(home screen icon) andapple-touch-startup-image
meta tags (splash screen)
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