# Feature: Change navigation selector icons ## Overview **Goal:** The current view navigation that is displayed in parent mode currently displays custom svg drawing for Children, Tasks, Rewards, and Notifications. I have new png image files that I'd like to replace them with. **User Story:** As a user, when I am in parent mode, I should be able to use the navigation selector as usual but see the updated images in the buttons. **Rules:** The size of the navigation view-selector should still remain the same for both desktop and mobile. The images should replace the svg drawings. This will most likely only affect ParentView.vue / ParentLayout.vue **Drawing to image replacements:** aria-label: "Children" -> frontend/vue-app/public/nav/children.png aria-label: "Tasks" -> frontend/vue-app/public/nav/chores.png aria-label: "Rewards" -> frontend/vue-app/public/nav/rewards.png aria-label: "Notifications" -> frontend/vue-app/public/nav/notifications.png --- ## Frontend Implementation - Replaced all four SVG drawings in the view-selector nav in `ParentLayout.vue` with `` tags pointing to the corresponding PNG files under `/nav/`. - The Notifications button wraps its image in a positioned container so the existing unread badge dot continues to render correctly over the icon. - Added `.nav-icon` scoped styles: fixed 40×40px, `object-fit: contain`, and a reduced opacity (0.55) at rest that transitions to full opacity on active/hover. - Added `.nav-icon-wrap` scoped styles for the Notifications icon wrapper to keep the badge positioned correctly. - No changes to button sizing, layout, or responsive breakpoints — the selector dimensions are unchanged on both desktop and mobile. ### Frontend - [x] Children, Tasks, Rewards, and Notifications nav buttons display PNG images instead of SVG drawings - [x] Images sourced from `frontend/vue-app/public/nav/` as specified - [x] Button and selector dimensions unchanged on desktop and mobile - [x] Notifications unread badge dot continues to render correctly over the icon - [x] Active and hover states visually reflected via opacity transition