Familypedia
Advertisement
For Wikipedia-related information, see SVG support on Meta.
Scalable Vector Graphics
SVG
Filename extension .svg, .svgz
Internet media type image/svg+xml[1]
Developed by World Wide Web Consortium
Type of format vector image format
Extended from XML

Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is an XML specification and file format for describing two-dimensional vector graphics, both static and animated. SVG can be purely declarative or may include scripting. Images can contain hyperlinks using outbound simple XLinks.[2] It is an open standard created by the World Wide Web Consortium's SVG Working Group.

Scalable Vector Graphics

  • SXBL
  • SVG Working Group
  • SVG filter effects
  • Precision Graphics Markup Language
  • Vector Markup Language
  • XHTML+MathML+SVG
  • SVG animation
  • Comparison of layout engines (SVG)

Overview[]

SVG was developed during the period 1999–2000 by a group of companies within the W3C after the competing standards PGML (developed from Adobe's PostScript) and VML (developed from Microsoft's RTF), both submitted to W3C in 1998, could not gain enough support for ratification. SVG was initially based on both those formats.

Bitmap VS SVG

This image illustrates the difference between bitmap and vector images. The vector image can be scaled indefinitely without loss of image quality, while the bitmap cannot.

SVG allows three types of graphic objects:

Graphical objects can be grouped, styled, transformed, and composited into previously rendered objects. SVG does not directly support z-indices[3] that separate drawing order from document order for objects, which is a drawback with respect to other vector markup languages like VML. Text can be in any XML namespace suitable to the application, which enhances searchability and accessibility of the SVG graphics. The feature set includes nested transformations, clipping paths, alpha masks, filter effects, template objects and extensibility.

Printing[]

While being primarily designated as a vector graphics markup language, the specification is also designed with the basic capabilities of a page description language, like Adobe's PDF. It contains provisions for rich graphics, and is also compatible with the CSS specification's properties for styling purposes; thus, unlike XHTML and XSL-FO which are layout-oriented languages, SVG is a fully presentational language[4]. A much more print-specialized subset of SVG (SVG Print) is currently a W3C Working Draft[5].

Scripting and animation[]

SVG drawings can be dynamic and interactive. Time-based modifications to the elements can be described in SMIL, or can be programmed in a scripting language (e.g., ECMAScript). The W3C explicitly recommends SMIL as the standard for animation in SVG[6], however it is more common to find SVG animated with ECMAScript because it is a language that many developers already understand, and it is more compatible with existing renderers. A rich set of event handlers such as onmouseover and onclick can be assigned to any SVG graphical object.

Compression[]

SVG images, being XML, contain many repeated fragments of text and are thus particularly suited to compression by gzip, though other compression methods may be used effectively. Once an SVG image has been compressed by gzip it may be referred to as an "SVGZ" image; with the corresponding filename extension. The resulting file may be as small as 20%[7] of the original size.

Development history[]

SVG was developed by the W3C SVG Working Group starting in 1998, after Macromedia and Microsoft introduced Vector Markup Language (VML) whereas Adobe Systems and Sun Microsystems submitted a competing format known as PGML. The working group was chaired by Chris Lilley of the W3C.

  • SVG 1.0 became a W3C Recommendation on September 4, 2001.[8]
  • SVG 1.1 became a W3C Recommendation on January 14, 2003.[9] The SVG 1.1 specification is modularized in order to allow subsets to be defined as profiles. Apart from this, there is very little difference between SVG 1.1 and SVG 1.0.
    • SVG Tiny and SVG Basic (the Mobile SVG Profiles) became W3C Recommendations on January 14, 2003. These are described as profiles of SVG 1.1.
  • SVG Tiny 1.2 became a W3C Candidate Recommendation on August 10, 2006.[10][11] SVG Full 1.2 is a W3C Working Draft. SVG Tiny 1.2 was initially released as a profile, and later refactored to be a complete specification, including all needed parts of SVG 1.1 and SVG 1.2. A similarly refactored draft for SVG 1.2 Full has not yet been released. A notable feature addition in the SVG Full 1.2 W3C Working Draft (absent from SVG Tiny 1.2) is syntax for multipage documents;[12] the semantics of multiple pages with respect to non-hardcopy rendering are however undefined.

Mobile profiles[]

Because of industry demand, two mobile profiles were introduced with SVG 1.1: SVG Tiny (SVGT) and SVG Basic (SVGB). These are subsets of the full SVG standard, mainly intended for user agents with limited capabilities. In particular, SVG Tiny was defined for highly restricted mobile devices such as cellphones, and SVG Basic was defined for higher-level mobile devices, such as PDAs.

Neither mobile profile includes support for the full DOM, while only SVG Basic has optional support for scripting, but because they are fully compatible subsets of the full standard most SVG graphics can still be rendered by devices which only support the mobile profiles.[13]

Example[]

SVG is an application of XML. An SVG file is therefore a simple text file, which can be viewed and edited as with any other markup.

Svg example3

How this SVG markup appears in a capable viewer

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN"
  "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd">

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
 width="467" height="462">
  <rect x="80" y="60" width="250" height="250" rx="20"
      style="fill:#ff0000; stroke:#000000;stroke-width:2px;" />
  
  <rect x="140" y="120" width="250" height="250" rx="40"
      style="fill:#0000ff; stroke:#000000; stroke-width:2px;
      fill-opacity:0.7;" />
</svg>

Filter effects[]

A filter effect consists of a series of graphics operations that are applied to a given source vector graphic to produce a modified bitmapped result.

Filter effects are defined by filter elements. To apply a filter effect to a graphics element or a container element the 'filter' property is set on a given element. Each 'filter' element contains a set of filter primitives as its children. Each filter primitive performs a single fundamental graphical operation (e.g., a Gaussian blur or a lighting effect) on one or more inputs, producing a graphical result. Because most of the filter primitives represent some form of image processing, in most cases the output from a filter primitive is a single RGBA bitmap image (however, it will be regenerated if a higher resolution is called on).

The original source graphic or the result from a filter primitive can be used as input into one or more other filter primitives. A common application is to use the source graphic multiple times. For example, a simple filter could replace one graphic by two by adding a black copy of original source graphic offset to create a drop shadow. In effect, there are now two layers of graphics, both with the same original source graphics.

List of SVG filter primitives[]

The following table lists the filter primitives available in SVG 1.0 and SVG 1.1. SVG Tiny does not support filter effects, while SVG Basic supports only those filter primitives indicated by SVGB.

Name Element SVG Basic
Blend feBlend SVGB
Color matrix feColorMatrix SVGB
Component transfer feComponentTransfer SVGB
Composite feComposite SVGB
Convolve matrix feConvolveMatrix  
Diffuse lighting feDiffuseLighting  
Displacement map feDisplacementMap  
Flood feFlood SVGB
Gaussian blur feGaussianBlur SVGB
Image feImage SVGB
Merge feMerge SVGB
Morphology feMorphology  
Offset feOffset SVGB
Specular lighting feSpecularLighting  
Tile feTile SVGB
Turbulence feTurbulence  

Framework for applying a filter[]

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN"
  "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd">

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
 width="4in" height="3in">
  <defs>
    <filter id="AFilter">
      <!-- Definition of filter goes here -->
    </filter>
  </defs>
  <text style="filter:url(#AFilter)">Text with a filter applied</text>
</svg>

Support for SVG in web browsers[]

The use of SVG on the web is in its infancy; there is a great deal of inertia due to the long-time use of pure raster formats and other formats like Adobe Flash or Java applets, and browser support for SVG is still uneven. Web sites which serve SVG images typically also provide the images in a raster format, either automatically by HTTP content negotiation or allowing the user to directly choose the file.

Native support[]

There are several advantages to native support, among which are no need for the installation of a plugin, the ability to freely mix SVG with other formats in a single document, and rendering scripting between different document formats considerably more reliably. At this time all major browsers have committed to some level of SVG support except for Internet Explorer, yet the implementations are lacking in consistency and completeness. See Comparison of layout engines for further details.

  • The Opera web browser (since 8.0) has support for the SVG 1.1 Tiny specification while Opera 9 includes SVG 1.1 Basic support and some of SVG 1.1 Full. Since 9.5 alpha 1 Opera has partial SVG Tiny 1.2 support.
  • Browsers based on the Gecko layout engine version 1.8 (such as Firefox, Netscape, Camino, SeaMonkey and Epiphany), all have incomplete support for the SVG 1.1 Full specification. The Mozilla site has an overview of the modules which are supported in Firefox 1.5[14] and an overview of the modules which are in progress in the development version of Firefox.[15] Gecko 1.9 will be included in the upcoming Firefox 3.0 and will add support for more of the SVG specification (including some filters).[16]
  • KDE's Konqueror has a fairly complete SVG plugin called KSVG. KSVG2 is slated to be rolled into KDE 4 core which could make it native rendering for Konqueror some time in the future. KDE 4 will also feature system-wide support and use of SVG for graphics. Elsewhere in KDE the format is finding greater use, and from version 3.4 onwards SVG wallpapers are supported.
  • Apple's Safari browser ported KSVG2 into WebCore, initiating work on incorporating native support of SVG into Safari. Nightly builds of Safari and the Safari 3.0 beta include SVG support. The Safari beta's SVG support still is not perfect, though[17].
  • The Omni Group's OmniWeb 5.5 browser, which is based on a later version of Apple's WebCore/WebKit than that used in the current public release of Safari, has partial support for SVG.
  • Amaya has partial SVG support.

Plugin support[]

In current versions of Internet Explorer a plugin is needed to view SVG content.

The most widely available SVG plugin on the desktop is from Adobe Systems and supports most of SVG 1.0/1.1. Adobe's SVG download page now says Adobe will discontinue support for Adobe SVG Viewer on January 1, 2008."[18] while its End Of Life page now says "Please note that Adobe has announced that it will discontinue support for Adobe SVG Viewer on January 1, 2009."[19]. For Safari, the Adobe plugin supports only the PowerPC platform. For Safari on Intel machines, Safari must run under Rosetta for the Adobe plugin to work.

Another plugin, called the Renesis Player [2], exists for Internet Explorer and the Win32 platform. Renesis aims to support full SVG 1.2 [3], as well as JavaScript interactivity capabilities. There are indications that a Firefox plugin may also be in the works [4]. The Renesis version 0.7 is available as of July 4, 2007.

A plugin was once offered from Corel.

The SVG Map Consortium released a plugin on September 6, 2007 that runs in Internet Explorer for Windows.[20][21]

Support in applications[]

Images are usually automatically rasterised using a library such as ImageMagick, which provides a quick but incomplete implementation of SVG, or Batik, which implements nearly all of SVG 1.1 but requires the Java Runtime Environment.

  • Inkscape is a free software/open source SVG drawing program for Linux, Windows and Mac OS.
  • The Batik SVG Toolkit can be used by Java programs to render, generate, and manipulate SVG graphics.
  • xfig allows import and export of SVG drawings.
  • The GNOME project has had integrated SVG support throughout the desktop since 2000.
  • Images drawn in OpenOffice.org Draw can be exported as SVG. Import filters are available[22] to import SVG images into OOo documents.
  • Adobe Illustrator supports both the import and export of SVG images.
  • CorelDRAW has an SVG export and import filter.
  • Sketsa is a cross-platform SVG drawing package.[23]
  • Xara Xtreme has an SVG export and import filter in its free/open source Linux version.
  • KoolMoves has very weak SVG support.
  • Microsoft Visio can save files in the SVG format as well as the SVG compressed format. Graphs created in Microsoft Excel or figures from Microsoft Word can be cut and pasted into Microsoft Visio documents.
  • EVE (Embedded Vector Editor) can import and export vector and SVG graphics.
  • IVEO Viewer is a self-voicing tactile-audio system with native SVG support.
  • Casewise Portal generates diagrams exclusively in SVG.
  • The Flame Project is an Adobe Flash-like editor to create SVG animation on Linux and Windows.[24]

Some viewers are listed in External links below.

Also some programing languages and scientific plotting programs can be used to create SVG plots:

Mobile support[]

On mobile, the most popular implementations for mobile phones are by Ikivo and Bitflash, while for PDAs, Bitflash and Intesis have implementations. Flash Lite by Adobe optionally supports SVG Tiny since version 1.1. At the SVG Open 2005 conference, Sun demonstrated a mobile implementation of SVG Tiny 1.1 for the CLDC platform. Mobile SVG players from Ikivo and BitFlash come pre-installed, i.e., the manufacturers burn the SVG player code in their mobiles before shipping to the customers. Mobiles also can include full web browsers (such as Opera Mini and the iPhone's Safari) which include SVG support.

The level of SVG Tiny support available varies from mobile to mobile, depending on the manufacturer and version of the SVG engine installed. Many of the new mobiles support additional features beyond SVG Tiny 1.1, like gradient and opacity; this standard is often referred as SVGT 1.1+.

Nokia's S60 platform has built-in support for SVG. For example, all icons are rendered using the platform's SVG engine. Nokia has also led the JSR 226: Scalable 2D Vector Graphics API expert group which defines Java ME API for SVG presentation and manipulation. This API has been implemented in S60 Platform 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 onward [25]. Some Series 40 phones also support SVG (such as 6280).

Most Sony Ericsson phones beginning with K700 (by release date) support SVG Tiny 1.1. Рhones beginning with K750 also support such features as opacity and gradients. Phones with Java Platform-8 have support for JSR 226.

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

This page uses content from the English language Wikipedia. The original content was at Scalable Vector Graphics. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with this Familypedia wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
Advertisement