A collection of 34 gopher-themed icons and images for the Go programming language community.
Gophericons is a collection of 34 gopher-themed icons and images specifically created for the Go programming language community. It provides developers with visual assets featuring the official Go mascot that can be used in presentations, documentation, websites, and applications. The project solves the need for consistent, high-quality gopher imagery that maintains the spirit of the Go ecosystem.
Go developers, technical writers, and community organizers who need gopher-themed visual assets for their projects, documentation, or presentations. It's particularly useful for those creating Go-related educational content or community resources.
Developers choose Gophericons because it offers a curated collection of gopher images with proper Creative Commons licensing, ensuring legal use while maintaining visual consistency with the Go brand. Unlike searching for random gopher images online, this collection provides reliable, community-vetted assets specifically designed for developer use.
34 gopher images for Go developers community
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Provides 34 unique gopher images with various styles and poses, offering a specific, community-vetted set for Go-related visuals.
Based on Renee French's original design with Creative Commons 3.0 attribution, ensuring legal use and proper credit in projects.
Tailored for the Go programming language community, making it ideal for presentations, documentation, and Go-specific content.
Offers ready-to-use image files that can be directly incorporated into projects without additional setup or processing steps.
The README lacks usage examples, integration guides, or file specifications, making adoption less straightforward for users.
Only includes fixed image files (e.g., JPG/PNG) with no vector formats, limiting scalability and customization for modern design needs.
With just 34 images, it may not cover diverse icon requirements for large projects or varied application interfaces.
The Creative Commons license requires attribution, which can be cumbersome for projects seeking minimal legal complexity or streamlined workflows.