I'm currently confused in using the icon in CSS pseudo-elements. There are 4 kind of font-family for fontawesome : Font Awesome 5 Free, Font Awesome 5 Solid, Font Awesome 5 Brands, Font Awesome 5 Regular
Here is the HTML :
<h1>Hello</h1>
I use this icon : https://fontawesome.com/icons/twitter?style=brands
As you can see, its a brands icon, so font-family : Font Awesome 5 Brands
h1:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-style: normal;
  font-variant: normal;
  text-rendering: auto;
  -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
  content: "\f099"; /* TWITTER ICON */
  font-family: "Font Awesome 5 Brands";
  font-weight: 400;
}
IT WORKS!
I use this icon : https://fontawesome.com/icons/phone?style=solid
As you can see, its a solid icon, so font-family : Font Awesome 5 Solid
h1:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-style: normal;
  font-variant: normal;
  text-rendering: auto;
  -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
  content: "\f095"; /* PHONE ICON */
  font-family: "Font Awesome 5 Solid";
  font-weight: 900;
}
DOESN'T WORK!
What did i do wrong?
How do we know when to use the correct font-family?
Add styling to element that will contain the pseudo-element to support positioning. Set the font-family to Font Awesome 5 Duotone , the font-weight to 900 , and add positioning styles for the pseudo-element. Set the default opacity levels and colors for each layer of the duotone icon.
Font Awesome 5 breaks backwards compatibility with Font Awesome 4 by changing both the prefixes and the names of certain icon classes.
Simply use all of them in the same font-family and the browser will do the job. If it doesn't find it in the first one, it will use the second one. (Multiple fonts in Font-Family property?)
By the way, the correct font-family is Free not Solid because the difference between Solid and Regular is the font-weight and both have the same font-family. There is no Solid and Regular in font-family, only Free and Brands.
You may also notice that almost all the Solid version of the icons are free BUT not all the regular version are free. Some of them are included in the PRO package. If an icon is not showing it's not necessarely a font-family issue.
All the Light and duotone version are PRO ones.
.icon {
  display: inline-block;
  font-style: normal;
  font-variant: normal;
  text-rendering: auto;
  -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased;
  font-family: "Font Awesome 5 Brands","Font Awesome 5 Free";
}
.icon1:before {
  content: "\f099";
  /* TWITTER ICON */
  font-weight: 400;
}
.icon2:before {
  content: "\f095";
  /* PHONE ICON */
  font-weight: 900;
}
.icon3:before {
  content: "\f095";
  /* PHONE ICON */
  font-weight: 400;/*This one will not work because the regular version of the phone icon is in the Pro Package*/
}<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://use.fontawesome.com/releases/v5.11.0/css/all.css" >
<div class="icon1 icon"></div>
<div class="icon2 icon"></div>
<br>
<div class="icon3 icon"></div>
Reference: https://fontawesome.com/how-to-use/on-the-web/advanced/css-pseudo-elements#define
Related question dealing with the font-weight issue: Font Awesome 5 on pseudo elements shows square instead of icon
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