All SVG content is drawn inside SVG viewports. Every SVG viewport defines a drawing region characterized by a size (width, height), and an origin, measured in abstract user units.
Note that the term SVG viewport is distinct from the "viewport" term used in CSS.
The initial viewport is a top-level SVG viewport that establishes a mapping between the coordinate system used by the containing environment (for example, CSS pixels in web browsers) and user units. Establishing an initial viewport is described in more detail in The initial viewport.
SVG viewports are only established by elements. See Establishing a new SVG viewport for information on which elements generate viewports.
Each SVG viewport generates a viewport coordinate system and a user coordinate system, initially identical. Providing a ‘viewBox’ on a viewport's element transforms the user coordinate system relative to the viewport coordinate system as described in The ‘viewBox’ attribute. Child elements of a viewport can further modify the user coordinate system, for example by specifying the transform property.
SVG viewports can be nested. Percentage units are resolved with reference to the width and height of the nearest ancestral SVG viewport. Hence, nesting SVG viewports provides an opportunity to redefine the meaning of percentage units and provide a new reference rectangle for "fitting" a graphic relative to a particular rectangular area.
The width, height and origin of SVG viewports is established by a negotiation process between the SVG document fragment generating the SVG viewport, and the parent of that fragment (whether real or implicit). See Establishing a new SVG viewport for a description of this negotiation process.
By default, a nested SVG viewport's viewport coordinate system is equivalent to the local coordinate system of the parent element, translated by the origin of the SVG viewport's element. However, a transform property on an SVG viewport's element will modify the viewport coordinate system relative to the parent element's user coordinate system.
Abstractly, all SVG viewports are embedded in the canvas, a drawing region that is infinitely large in all relevant dimensions.
This process converts the min-x, min-y, width and height values of a viewBox attribute, the position and size of the element on which the viewBox attribute is defined, and the value of the preserveAspectRatio attribute on that element into a translation and a scale that is applied to content contained by the element.
The transform applied to content contained by the element is given by translate(translate-x, translate-y) scale(scale-x, scale-y).
The initial viewport's width, must be the value of the width presentation attribute on the outermost svg element, unless the following conditions are met:
Under these conditions, the viewport's width must be established via the positioning properties.
Similarly, if there are positioning properties specified on the referencing element or on the outermost svg element that are sufficient to establish the height of the viewport, then these positioning properties must establish the viewport's height; otherwise, the initial viewport's height must be the value of the height presentation attribute on the outermost svg element.
If the width or height presentation attributes on the outermost svg element are in user units (i.e., no unit identifier has been provided), then the value is assumed to be equivalent to the same number of "px" units (see Units).
In the following example, an SVG graphic is embedded inline within a parent XML document which is formatted using CSS layout rules. Since CSS positioning properties are not provided on the outermost svg element, the width="100px" and height="200px" attributes determine the size of the initial viewport:
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="yes"?> <parent xmlns="http://some.url"> <!-- SVG graphic --> <svg xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' width="100px" height="200px"> <path d="M100,100 Q200,400,300,100"/> <!-- rest of SVG graphic would go here --> </svg> </parent>
For the outermost svg element, the SVG user agent must determine an initial viewport coordinate system and an initial user coordinate system such that the two coordinates systems are identical. The origin of both coordinate systems must be at the origin of the SVG viewport, and one unit in the initial coordinate system must equal one CSS 2.1 px ([CSS2], section 4.3.2) in the SVG viewport. In stand-alone SVG documents and in SVG document fragments embedded (by reference or inline) within parent documents where the parent's layout is determined by CSS [CSS2], the initial viewport coordinate system (and therefore the initial user coordinate system) must have its origin at the top/left of the viewport, with the positive x-axis pointing towards the right, the positive y-axis pointing down, and text rendered with an "upright" orientation, which means glyphs are oriented such that Roman characters and full-size ideographic characters for Asian scripts have the top edge of the corresponding glyphs oriented upwards and the right edge of the corresponding glyphs oriented to the right.
If the SVG implementation is part of a user agent which supports styling documents using CSS 2.1 compatible px units, then the SVG user agent should set its initial value for the size of a px unit in real world units to match the value used for other styling operations; otherwise, if the user agent can determine the size of a px unit from its environment, it should use that value; otherwise, it should choose an appropriate size for one px unit. In all cases, the size of a px must be in conformance with the rules described in CSS 2.1 ([CSS2], section 4.3.2).
Example InitialCoords below shows that the initial coordinate system has the origin at the top/left with the x-axis pointing to the right and the y-axis pointing down. The initial user coordinate system has one user unit equal to the parent (implicit or explicit) user agent's "pixel".
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="300px" height="100px" version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <desc>Example InitialCoords - SVG's initial coordinate system</desc> <g fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="3" > <line x1="0" y1="1.5" x2="300" y2="1.5" /> <line x1="1.5" y1="0" x2="1.5" y2="100" /> </g> <g fill="red" stroke="none" > <rect x="0" y="0" width="3" height="3" /> <rect x="297" y="0" width="3" height="3" /> <rect x="0" y="97" width="3" height="3" /> </g> <g font-size="14" font-family="Verdana" > <text x="10" y="20">(0,0)</text> <text x="240" y="20">(300,0)</text> <text x="10" y="90">(0,100)</text> </g> </svg>
User agents must support the transform property and presentation attribute as defined in [css-transforms-1].
Name | Value | Initial value | Animatable |
---|---|---|---|
viewBox | [<min-x>,? <min-y>,? <width>,? <height>] | As if not specified. | yes |
<min-x>, <min-y>, <width>, <height> = <number>
Transform on the ‘svg’ element is a bit special due to the ‘viewBox’ attribute. The transform should be applied as if the ‘svg’ had a parent element with that transform set.
RESOLUTION: transform property applies conceptually to the outside of the 'svg' element and there is no difference between
presentation attribute and style property (in terms of the visual result).
The ‘viewBox’ attribute, in conjunction with the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute, provides the capability to stretch an SVG viewport to fit a particular container element.
The value of the ‘viewBox’ attribute is a list of four numbers <min-x>, <min-y>, <width> and <height>, separated by whitespace and/or a comma, that specify a rectangle in user space that should be mapped to the bounds of the SVG viewport established by the given element, taking into account the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute. The presence of the ‘viewBox’ attribute results in a transformation being applied to the viewport coordinate system as described in Computing the equivalent transform of an SVG viewport.
A negative value for <width> or <height> is an error and invalidates the ‘viewBox’ attribute. A value of zero disables rendering of the element.
Example ViewBox illustrates the use of the ‘viewBox’ attribute on the outermost svg element to specify that the SVG content should stretch to fit bounds of the SVG viewport.
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="300px" height="200px" viewBox="0 0 1500 1000" preserveAspectRatio="none" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <desc>Example ViewBox - uses the viewBox attribute to automatically create an initial user coordinate system which causes the graphic to scale to fit into the SVG viewport no matter what size the SVG viewport is.</desc> <!-- This rectangle goes from (0,0) to (1500,1000) in user coordinate system. Because of the viewBox attribute above, the rectangle will end up filling the entire area reserved for the SVG content. --> <rect x="0" y="0" width="1500" height="1000" fill="yellow" stroke="blue" stroke-width="12" /> <!-- A large, red triangle --> <path fill="red" d="M 750,100 L 250,900 L 1250,900 z"/> <!-- A text string that spans most of the SVG viewport --> <text x="100" y="600" font-size="200" font-family="Verdana" > Stretch to fit </text> </svg>
Rendered into SVG viewport with width=300px, height=200px |
Rendered into SVG viewport with width=150px, height=200px |
|
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View
this example as SVG (SVG-enabled browsers only)
The effect of the ‘viewBox’ attribute is that the user agent automatically supplies the appropriate transformation matrix to map the specified rectangle in user coordinate system to the bounds of a designated region (often, the SVG viewport). To achieve the effect of the example on the left, with SVG viewport dimensions of 300 by 200 pixels, the user agent needs to automatically insert a transformation which scales both X and Y by 0.2. The effect is equivalent to having an SVG viewport of size 300px by 200px and the following supplemental transformation in the document, as follows:
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="300px" height="200px" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <g transform="scale(0.2)"> <!-- Rest of document goes here --> </g> </svg>
To achieve the effect of the example on the right, with SVG viewport dimensions of 150 by 200 pixels, the user agent needs to automatically insert a transformation which scales X by 0.1 and Y by 0.2. The effect is equivalent to having an SVG viewport of size 150px by 200px and the following supplemental transformation in the document, as follows:
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="150px" height="200px" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <g transform="scale(0.1 0.2)"> <!-- Rest of document goes here --> </g> </svg>
Note that in some cases the user agent will need to supply a translate transformation in addition to a scale transformation. For example, on an outermost svg element, a translate transformation will be needed if the ‘viewBox’ attributes specifies values other than zero for <min-x> or <min-y>.
If both transform (or ‘patternTransform’) and ‘viewBox’ are applied to an element two new coordinate systems are established. transform establishes the first new coordinate system for the element. ‘viewBox’ establishes a second coordinate system for all descendants of the element. The first coordinate system is post-multiplied by the second coordinate system.
Unlike the transform property, the automatic transformation that is created due to a ‘viewBox’ does not affect the ‘x’, ‘y’, ‘width’ and ‘height’ attributes (or in the case of the ‘marker’ element, the ‘markerWidth’ and ‘markerHeight’ attributes) on the element with the ‘viewBox’ attribute. Thus, in the example above which shows an ‘svg’ element which has width and height presentation attributes and a ‘viewBox’ attribute, the width and height represent values in the coordinate system that exists before the ‘viewBox’ transformation is applied. On the other hand, like the transform property, it does establish a new coordinate system for all other attributes and for descendant elements.
Name | Value | Initial value | Animatable |
---|---|---|---|
preserveAspectRatio | <align> <meetOrSlice>? | xMidYMid meet | yes |
<align> = none | xMinYMin | xMidYMin | xMaxYMin | xMinYMid | xMidYMid | xMaxYMid | xMinYMax | xMidYMax | xMaxYMax
<meetOrSlice> = meet | slice
Indicates whether or not to force uniform scaling. Applies to all elements that establish a new SVG viewport (see elements that establish SVG viewports), plus the ‘image’, ‘marker’, ‘pattern’ and ‘view’ elements
In some cases, typically when using the ‘viewBox’ attribute, it is desirable that the graphics stretch to fit non-uniformly to take up the entire SVG viewport. In other cases, it is desirable that uniform scaling be used for the purposes of preserving the aspect ratio of the graphics.
For elements that establish a new SVG viewport (see elements that establish SVG viewports), plus the ‘marker’, ‘pattern’ and ‘view’ elements, ‘preserveAspectRatio’ only applies when a value has been provided for ‘viewBox’ on the same element. For these elements, if attribute ‘viewBox’ is not provided, then ‘preserveAspectRatio’ is ignored.
For ‘image’ elements, ‘preserveAspectRatio’ indicates how referenced images should be fitted with respect to the reference rectangle and whether the aspect ratio of the referenced image should be preserved with respect to the current user coordinate system.
The <align> parameter indicates whether to force uniform scaling and, if so, the alignment method to use in case the aspect ratio of the ‘viewBox’ doesn't match the aspect ratio of the SVG viewport. The <align> parameter must be one of the following strings:
The <meetOrSlice> parameter is optional and, if provided, is separated from the <align> value by one or more spaces and then must be one of the following strings:
meet (the default) - Scale the graphic such that:
In this case, if the aspect ratio of the graphic does not match the SVG viewport, some of the SVG viewport will extend beyond the bounds of the ‘viewBox’ (i.e., the area into which the ‘viewBox’ will draw will be smaller than the SVG viewport).
slice - Scale the graphic such that:
In this case, if the aspect ratio of the ‘viewBox’ does not match the SVG viewport, some of the ‘viewBox’ will extend beyond the bounds of the SVG viewport (i.e., the area into which the ‘viewBox’ will draw is larger than the SVG viewport).
Example PreserveAspectRatio illustrates the various options on ‘preserveAspectRatio’. The example creates several new SVG viewports by including ‘svg’ sub-elements embedded inside the outermost svg element (see Establishing a new SVG viewport).
<svg width="450px" height="300px" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <desc>Example PreserveAspectRatio - illustrates preserveAspectRatio attribute</desc> <style type="text/css"> text { font-size: 9; } rect { fill: none; stroke: blue; } </style> <defs> <g id="smile"> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='39' style="fill:black;stroke:red"/> <circle cx='15' cy='20' r='10' fill='yellow'/> <circle cx='12' cy='17' r='1.5' fill='black'/> <circle cx='17' cy='17' r='1.5' fill='black'/> <path d='M 10 24 A 8 8 0 0 0 20 24' stroke='black' stroke-width='2'/> </g> </defs> <rect x="1" y="1" width="448" height="298"/> <text x="10" y="30">SVG to fit</text> <g transform="translate(20,40)"><use href="#smile" /></g> <text x="10" y="110">Viewport 1</text> <g transform="translate(10,120)"><rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/></g> <text x="10" y="180">Viewport 2</text> <g transform="translate(20,190)"><rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/></g> <g id="meet-group-1" transform="translate(100, 60)"> <text x="0" y="-30">--------------- meet ---------------</text> <g> <text y="-10">xMin*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMinYMin meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(70,0)"> <text y="-10">xMid*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(0,70)"> <text y="-10">xMax*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMaxYMax meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> </g> <g id="meet-group-2" transform="translate(250, 60)"> <text x="0" y="-30">---------- meet ----------</text> <g> <text y="-10">*YMin</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMinYMin meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(50, 0)"> <text y="-10">*YMid</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(100, 0)"> <text y="-10">*YMax</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMaxYMax meet" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> </g> <g id="slice-group-1" transform="translate(100, 220)"> <text x="0" y="-30">---------- slice ----------</text> <g> <text y="-10">xMin*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMinYMin slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(50,0)"> <text y="-10">xMid*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(100,0)"> <text y="-10">xMax*</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='29' height='59'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMaxYMax slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="30" height="60"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> </g> <g id="slice-group-2" transform="translate(250, 220)"> <text x="0" y="-30">--------------- slice ---------------</text> <g> <text y="-10">*YMin</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMinYMin slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(70,0)"> <text y="-10">*YMid</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> <g transform="translate(140,0)"> <text y="-10">*YMax</text> <rect x='.5' y='.5' width='49' height='29'/> <svg preserveAspectRatio="xMaxYMax slice" viewBox="0 0 30 40" width="50" height="30"> <use href="#smile" /> </svg> </g> </g> </svg>
Including an ‘svg’ element inside SVG content creates a new SVG viewport into which all contained graphics are drawn; this implicitly establishes both a new viewport coordinate system and a new user coordinate system. Additionally, there is a new meaning for percentage units therein, because a new SVG viewport has been established (see Units).
The bounds of the new SVG viewport are defined by the ‘x’, ‘y’, ‘width’ and ‘height’ attributes on the element establishing the new SVG viewport, such as an ‘svg’ element. Both the new viewport coordinate system and the new user coordinate system have their origins at (‘x’, ‘y’), where ‘x’ and ‘y’ represent the value of the corresponding attributes on the element establishing the SVG viewport. The orientation of the new viewport coordinate system and the new user coordinate system correspond to the orientation of the current user coordinate system for the element establishing the SVG viewport. A single unit in the new viewport coordinate system and the new user coordinate system are the same size as a single unit in the current user coordinate system for the element establishing the SVG viewport.
Here is an example:
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="4in" height="3in" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <desc>This SVG drawing embeds another one, thus establishing a new SVG viewport </desc> <!-- The following statement establishing a new SVG viewport and renders SVG drawing B into that SVG viewport --> <svg x="25%" y="25%" width="50%" height="50%"> <!-- drawing B goes here --> </svg> </svg>
For an extensive example of creating new SVG viewports, see Example PreserveAspectRatio.
The following elements establish new SVG viewports:
For historical reasons, the ‘pattern’ and ‘marker’ elements do not create a new viewport, despite accepting a ‘viewBox’ attribute. Neither do the ‘clipPath’ or ‘mask’ elements. Percentage lengths within the content of these elements are not proportional to the dimensions of the graphical effect region.
The ‘foreignObject’ element establishes a new CSS containing block for its child content. The same is true for a ‘video’, ‘audio’, or ‘canvas’ element when its fallback content is being rendered. This has some effects similar to a new viewport, resetting the scope of layout for child content. However, in order to render SVG elements that are descendents of ‘foreignObject’, a new ‘svg’ element must establish an SVG document fragment and SVG viewport.
An ‘image’ or ‘iframe’ element creates a new document viewport for the referenced document. If the referenced document is a SVG file, it will of course establish its own SVG viewport.
Whether a new SVG viewport also establishes a new additional clipping path is determined by the value of the overflow property on the element that establishes the new SVG viewport.
SVG follows the description and definition of common values and units from the CSS Values and Units Module [css-values] for attributes, presentation attributes and CSS properties. Each attribute and property must specify the used component value type. Subsequent or extending specifications published by the CSS WG or SVG WG may extend basic data types or add new data types.
For <percentage> values that are defined to be relative to the size of SVG viewport:
sqrt((width)**2 + (height)**2)/sqrt(2)
.Example Units below illustrates some of the processing rules for different types of units.
<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> <svg width="400px" height="200px" viewBox="0 0 4000 2000" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <title>Example Units</title> <desc>Illustrates various units options</desc> <!-- Frame the picture --> <rect x="5" y="5" width="3990" height="1990" fill="none" stroke="blue" stroke-width="10"/> <g fill="blue" stroke="red" font-family="Verdana" font-size="150"> <!-- Absolute unit specifiers --> <g transform="translate(400,0)"> <text x="-50" y="300" fill="black" stroke="none">Abs. units:</text> <rect x="0" y="400" width="4in" height="2in" stroke-width=".4in"/> <rect x="0" y="750" width="384" height="192" stroke-width="38.4"/> <g transform="scale(2)"> <rect x="0" y="600" width="4in" height="2in" stroke-width=".4in"/> </g> </g> <!-- Relative unit specifiers --> <g transform="translate(1600,0)"> <text x="-50" y="300" fill="black" stroke="none">Rel. units:</text> <rect x="0" y="400" width="2.5em" height="1.25em" stroke-width=".25em"/> <rect x="0" y="750" width="375" height="187.5" stroke-width="37.5"/> <g transform="scale(2)"> <rect x="0" y="600" width="2.5em" height="1.25em" stroke-width=".25em"/> </g> </g> <!-- Percentages --> <g transform="translate(2800,0)"> <text x="-50" y="300" fill="black" stroke="none">Percentages:</text> <rect x="0" y="400" width="10%" height="10%" stroke-width="1%"/> <rect x="0" y="750" width="400" height="200" stroke-width="31.62"/> <g transform="scale(2)"> <rect x="0" y="600" width="10%" height="10%" stroke-width="1%"/> </g> </g> </g> </svg>
The three rectangles on the left demonstrate the use of one of the absolute unit identifiers, the "in" unit (inch). CSS defines 1 inch to be equal to 96 pixels. Therefore, the topmost rectangle, which is specified in inches, is exactly the same size as the middle rectangle, which is specified in user units such that there are 96 user units for each corresponding inch in the topmost rectangle. The bottom rectangle of the group illustrates what happens when values specified in inches are scaled.
The three rectangles in the middle demonstrate the use of one of the relative unit identifiers, the "em" unit. Because the font-size property has been set to 150 on the outermost ‘g’ element, each "em" unit is equal to 150 user units. The topmost rectangle, which is specified in "em" units, is exactly the same size as the middle rectangle, which is specified in user units such that there are 150 user units for each corresponding "em" unit in the topmost rectangle. The bottom rectangle of the group illustrates what happens when values specified in "em" units are scaled.
The three rectangles on the right demonstrate the use of
percentages. Note that the width and height of the SVG viewport in
the user coordinate system for the SVG viewport element (in this
case, the outermost svg element) are 4000 and
2000, respectively, because processing the ‘viewBox’ attribute results in a
transformed user coordinate system. The topmost rectangle,
which is specified in percentage units, is exactly the same
size as the middle rectangle, which is specified in equivalent
user units. In particular, note that the stroke-width property in the
middle rectangle is set to 1% of the
sqrt((actual-width)**2 +
(actual-height)**2) / sqrt(2)
, which in this
case is .01*sqrt(4000*4000+2000*2000)/sqrt(2), or 31.62. The
bottom rectangle of the group illustrates what happens when
values specified in percentage units are scaled.
The bounding box (or "bbox") of an element is the tightest fitting rectangle aligned with the axes of that element's user coordinate system that entirely encloses it and its descendants.
Three kinds of bounding boxes can be computed for an element:
Note that the values of the opacity, visibility, fill, fill-opacity, fill-rule, stroke-dasharray and stroke-dashoffset properties on an element have no effect on the bounding box of an element.
For curved shapes, the bounding box must enclose all portions of the shape along the edge, not just end points. Note that control points for a curve which are not defined as lying along the line of the resulting curve (e.g., the second coordinate pair of a Cubic Bézier command) must not contribute to the dimensions of the bounding box (though those points may fall within the area of the bounding box, if they lie within the shape itself, or along or close to the curve). For example, control points of a curve that are at a further distance than the curve edge, from the non-enclosing side of the curve edge, must be excluded from the bounding box.
Even if an element is not in the rendering tree – due to it being 'display: none', within a ‘defs’ element, not usually rendered like a ‘symbol’ element or not currently present in the document tree – it still has a bounding box. A call to getBBox on the element will return the same rectangle as if the element were rendered. However, an element that is not in the rendering tree does not contribute to the bounding box of any ancestor element.
The following example defines a number of elements. The expected object bounding box for each element with an ID is shown below.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <title>Bounding Box Calculation</title> <desc>Examples of elements with different bounding box results based on context.</desc> <defs id="defs-1"> <rect id="rect-1" x="20" y="20" width="40" height="40" fill="blue" /> </defs> <g id="group-1"> <use id="use-1" href="#rect-1" x="10" y="10" /> <g id="group-2" display="none"> <rect id="rect-2" x="10" y="10" width="100" height="100" fill="red" /> </g> </g> </svg>
Element ID | Bounding Box Result |
---|---|
"defs-1 " |
{0, 0, 0, 0} |
"rect-1 " |
{20, 20, 40, 40} |
"group-1 " |
{30, 30, 40, 40} |
"use-1 " |
{30, 30, 40, 40} |
"group-2 " |
{10, 10, 100, 100} |
"rect-2 " |
{10, 10, 100, 100} |
For text content elements, for the purposes of the bounding box calculation, each glyph must be treated as a separate graphics element. The calculations must assume that all glyphs occupy the full glyph cell. The full glyph cell must have width equal to the horizontal advance and height equal to the EM box for horizontal text. For vertical text that is typeset sideways, the full glyph cell must have width equal to the EM box and height equal to the horizontal advance. For other vertical text, the full glyph cell must have width equal to the EM box and height equal to the vertical advance, or height equal to the height of the EM box if no vertical advance is defined in the font. For example, for horizontal text, the calculations must assume that each glyph extends vertically to the full ascent and descent values for the font.
Because declarative or scripted animation can change the shape, size, and position of an element, the bounding box is mutable. Thus, the bounding box for an element shall reflect the current values for the element at the snapshot in time at which the bounding box is requested, whether through a script call or as part of a declarative or linking syntax.
An element which has zero width, zero height, or both (such as a vertical or horizontal line, or a ‘rect’ element with a zero width or height) still has a bounding box, with a positive value for the positive dimension, or with '0' for both the width and height if no positive dimension is specified. Similarly, subpaths segments of a ‘path’ element with zero width and height must be included in that element's geometry for the sake of the bounding box.
An element with no position specified (such as a ‘path’ element with a value of none for the d property) is positioned at the point (0,0) for the purposes of calculating a bounding box.
Note that elements whose DOM object does not derive from SVGGraphicsElement (such as gradient elements) do not have a bounding box, and thus have no interface to request a bounding box.
Elements in the rendering tree which reference unresolved resources shall
still have a bounding box, defined by the position and dimensions specified in
their attributes, or by the initial value for those attributes if no
values are supplied. For example, the element <use href="#bad" x="10" y="10"/>
would have a bounding box with an x and y of 10 and a width and height of 0.
The following algorithm defines how to compute a bounding box for a given element. The inputs to the algorithm are:
The algorithm to compute the bounding box is as follows, depending on the type of element:
The values of the fill, fill-opacity and fill-rule properties do not affect fill-shape.
The values of the stroke-opacity, stroke-dasharray and stroke-dashoffset do not affect the calculation of the stroke shape.
The fill, stroke and markers input arguments to this algorithm do not affect the bounding box returned for these elements.
The union box with a value of (0, 0, 0, 0) and an empty shape is box.
The object bounding box, stroke bounding box or decorated bounding box of an element is the result of invoking the bounding box computation algorithm above with the following arguments: element is the element itself; space is the element's user coordinate system; fill is true; stroke is true if we are computing the stroke bounding box or decorated bounding box, and false othwerise; markers is true if we are computing the decorated bounding box, and false otherwise; and clipped is false.
The following elements offer the option of expressing coordinate values and lengths as fractions (and, in some cases, percentages) of the object bounding box, by setting a specified attribute to 'objectBoundingBox' on the given element:
Element | Attribute | Effect |
---|---|---|
‘linearGradient’ | ‘gradientUnits’ | Indicates that the attributes which specify the gradient vector (‘x1’, ‘y1’, ‘x2’, ‘y2’) represent fractions or percentages of the bounding box of the element to which the gradient is applied. |
‘radialGradient’ | ‘gradientUnits’ | Indicates that the attributes which specify the center (‘cx’, ‘cy’), the radius (‘r’) and focus (‘fx’, ‘fy’) represent fractions or percentages of the bounding box of the element to which the gradient is applied. |
‘pattern’ | ‘patternUnits’ | Indicates that the attributes which define how to tile the pattern (‘x’, ‘y’, ‘width’, ‘height’) are established using the bounding box of the element to which the pattern is applied. |
‘pattern’ | ‘patternContentUnits’ | Indicates that the user coordinate system for the contents of the pattern is established using the bounding box of the element to which the pattern is applied. |
‘clipPath’ | ‘clipPathUnits’ | Indicates that the user coordinate system for the contents of the ‘clipPath’ element is established using the bounding box of the element to which the clipping path is applied. |
‘mask’ | ‘maskUnits’ | Indicates that the attributes which define the masking region (‘x’, ‘y’, ‘width’, ‘height’) is established using the bounding box of the element to which the mask is applied. |
‘mask’ | ‘maskContentUnits’ | Indicates that the user coordinate system for the contents of the ‘mask’ element are established using the bounding box of the element to which the mask is applied. |
‘filter’ | ‘filterUnits’ | Indicates that the attributes which define the filter effects region (‘x’, ‘y’, ‘width’, ‘height’) represent fractions or percentages of the bounding box of the element to which the filter is applied. |
‘filter’ | ‘primitiveUnits’ | Indicates that the various length values within the filter primitives represent fractions or percentages of the bounding box of the element to which the filter is applied. |
In the discussion that follows, the term applicable element is the element to which the given effect applies. For gradients and patterns, the applicable element is the graphics element which has its fill or stroke property referencing the given gradient or pattern. (For special rules concerning text elements, see the discussion of object bounding box units and text elements.) For clipping paths, masks and filters, the applicable element can be either a container element or a graphics element.
When keyword objectBoundingBox is used, then the effect is as if a supplemental transformation matrix were inserted into the list of nested transformation matrices to create a new user coordinate system.
First, the (minx,miny) and (maxx,maxy) coordinates are determined by the extends of the object bounding box of the applicable element.
Then, coordinate (0,0) in the new user coordinate system is mapped to the (minx,miny) corner of the tight bounding box within the user coordinate system of the applicable element and coordinate (1,1) in the new user coordinate system is mapped to the (maxx,maxy) corner of the tight bounding box of the applicable element. In most situations, the following transformation matrix produces the correct effect:
[ (maxx-minx) 0 0 (maxy-miny) minx miny ]
When percentages are used with attributes that define the gradient vector, the pattern tile, the filter region or the masking region, a percentage represents the same value as the corresponding decimal value (e.g., 50% means the same as 0.5). If percentages are used within the content of a ‘pattern’, ‘clipPath’, ‘mask’ or ‘filter’ element, these values are treated according to the processing rules for percentages as defined in Units.
Any numeric value can be specified for values expressed as a fraction or percentage of object bounding box units. In particular, fractions less are zero or greater than one and percentages less than 0% or greater than 100% can be specified.
Keyword objectBoundingBox should not be used when the geometry of the applicable element has no width or no height, such as the case of a horizontal or vertical line, even when the line has actual thickness when viewed due to having a non-zero stroke width since stroke width is ignored for bounding box calculations. When the geometry of the applicable element has no width or height and objectBoundingBox is specified, then the given effect (e.g., a gradient or a filter) will be ignored.
To enable inclusion of SVG in host documents formatted with CSS, a concrete object size must be calculated. The concrete object size must be calculated using the Default Sizing Algorithm defined in CSS Images 3 [css-images-3], with the following inputs:
The specified size must be determined from the used values for the width and height sizing properties of the ‘svg’ element.
The intrinsic dimensions must also be determined from the width and height sizing properties. If either width or height are not specified, the used value is the initial value 'auto'. 'auto' and percentage lengths must not be used to determine an intrinsic width or intrinsic height.
With bitmap image formats, the intrinsic dimensions are fixed in the image file, and the specified size is defined in the host document as needed to scale the image. SVG, being inherently scalable, adapts the intrinsic width and intrinsic height to be the width and height of the specified size. Therefore, when specified as a length, the width and height sizing properties of the ‘svg’ element control the intrinsic dimensions of the SVG image and the specified size that is used when placing the SVG image in a host document.
The intrinsic aspect ratio must be calculated using the following algorithm. If the algorithm returns null, then there is no intrinsic aspect ratio.
The behaviour defined in this section is specific to CSS, but may be adapted to other host contexts. In all host contexts, the intrinsic aspect ratio, where available, must be respected when sizing the SVG viewport.
Examples:
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="10cm" height="5cm"> ... </svg>
In this example the intrinsic aspect ratio of the SVG viewport is 2:1. The intrinsic width is 10cm and the intrinsic height is 5cm.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="100%" height="50%" viewBox="0 0 200 200"> ... </svg>
In this example the intrinsic aspect ratio of the outermost SVG viewport is 1:1. An aspect ratio calculation in this case allows embedding in an object within a containing block that is only constrained in one direction.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="10cm" viewBox="0 0 200 200"> ... </svg>
In this case the intrinsic aspect ratio is 1:1.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="75%" height="10cm" viewBox="0 0 200 200"> ... </svg>
In this example, the intrinsic aspect ratio is 1:1.
Add more examples for the new auto value? E.g some of the examples provided by David Vest.
SVG 2 Requirement: | SVG 2 will have constrained transformations based on SVG 1.2 Tiny. |
---|---|
Resolution: | Add vector effects extension proposal to SVG 2 specification. |
Purpose: | To include non-scaling features (non-scaling part of the object, and non-scaling entire object |
Owner: | Satoru Takagi (ACTION-3619) |
Sometimes it is of interest to let the outline of an object keep its original width or to let the position of an object fix no matter which transforms are applied to it. For example, in a map with a 2px wide line representing roads it is of interest to keep the roads 2px wide even when the user zooms into the map, or introductory notes on the graphic chart in which panning is possible.
To offer such effects regarding special coordinate transformations and graphic drawings, SVG Tiny 1.2 introduced the vector-effect property. Although SVG Tiny 1.2 introduced only non-scaling stroke behavior, this version introduces a number of additional effects. Furthermore, since these effects can be specified in combination, they show more various effects. And, future versions of the SVG language will allow for more powerful vector effects through this property.
Values of vector-effect other than non-scaling-stroke and none are at risk of being dropped from SVG 2 due to a lack of implementations. Feedback from implementers is requested, regarding the practicality of implementing them as currently specified, during the implementation period.
Name: | vector-effect |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ non-scaling-stroke | non-scaling-size | non-rotation | fixed-position ]+ [ viewport | screen ]? |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | graphics elements and ‘use’ |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
Animatable: | yes |
These values can be enumerated. Thereby, the effect which has these characteristics simultaneously can be specified.
The following two values assists the above-mentioned values. They show the host coordinate space of constrained transformations. Especially it has effective for the element belonging to nested viewport coordinate system such as nested contents or nested ‘svg’ elements. An initial value in case it is not specified is viewport.
Note: Future versions of SVG may allow ways to specify the device coordinate system.
This section shows the list of transformation formulas regarding combinations of the values for clarification of the behavior of vector effects excluding non-scaling-stroke which has clear implications.
The vector-effect property has no effect on transformations performed in a 3d rendering context.
The normal coordinate transformation formula from user coordinate system to viewport coordinate system is as follows.
<circle vector-effect="veValue" transform="translate(xo yo)" cx="xf" cy="yf" r=".."/>
When the vector-effect is added to an element like the above, the transformation formula for user coordinate to the device coordinate changes as follows. Here, xf and yf are user coordinate of the corresponding element and its descendant. And, xo and yo are matrix element e and f of the transform attribute which the corresponding element has. In addition, |det(CTM)| is absolute value of the determinants of CTM. When this value becomes 0 and non-scaling-size is appointed, vector-effect becomes invalidity namely none.
veValue | Formula |
---|---|
non-scaling-size |
|
non-rotation |
|
non-scaling-size non-rotation |
|
fixed-position |
|
fixed-position non-scaling-size |
|
fixed-position non-rotation |
|
fixed-position non-scaling-size non-rotation |
|
Below is normal coordinate transformation formula for nested viewport coordinate systems without vector effects. xviewport(UA) and yviewport(UA) are coordinates which under the immediate control of user agent. CTMthis is CTM for the transformation matrix from user coordinate system of an target graphic to viewport coordinate system to which it belongs. CTMparent is CTM for the transformation matrix from aforementioned viewport coordinate system to viewport coordinate system of the parent of that. And, CTMroot is CTM for rootmost viewport coordinate system (UA).
When applying seven formulas of the preceding section to nested viewport coordinate systems, the application way of those formulas changes as follows by whether viewport or screen is specified as the additional value of vector-effect.
When viewport value is specified, user agent computes coordinates combining either of seven formulas of the preceding chapter, and the following formulas.
When screen value is specified, user agent computes coordinates combining either of seven formulas of the preceding chapter, and the following formulas.
Below is an example of the non-scaling-stroke vector-effect.
<?xml version="1.0"?> <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="6cm" height="4cm" viewBox="0 0 600 400" viewport-fill="rgb(255,150,200)"> <desc>Example non-scaling stroke</desc> <rect x="1" y="1" width="598" height="398" fill="none" stroke="black"/> <g transform="scale(9,1)"> <line stroke="black" stroke-width="5" x1="10" y1="50" x2="10" y2="350"/> <line vector-effect="non-scaling-stroke" stroke="black" stroke-width="5" x1="32" y1="50" x2="32" y2="350"/> <line vector-effect="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="5" x1="55" y1="50" x2="55" y2="350"/> </g> </svg>
Below is an example of the none vector-effect (no vector effect).
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
Source code
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="-50,-50,500,500" height="500" width="500"> <rect x="-50" y="-50" width="500" height="500" stroke="orange" stroke-width="3" fill="none"/> <!-- Nested user coordinate system is transformed by this transform attribute --> <g transform="matrix(2.1169438081370817,0.3576047954311102,-0.3576047954311102,1.4700998667618626,0,0) translate(-50,-50)"> <svg viewBox="-50,-50,500,500" height="500" width="500"> <!-- Graph paper on the this svg's base user coordinate system --> <g stroke="green" stroke-width="1" fill="none"> <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="10"/> <circle cx="150" cy="150" r="7"/> <path fill="green" stroke="none" d="M0,-3 L30,-3 25,-10 50,0 25,10 30,3 0,3z"/> <line x1="-100" y1="-100" x2="600" y2="-100" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line x1="-100" y1="000" x2="600" y2="000"/> <line x1="-100" y1="100" x2="600" y2="100" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line x1="-100" y1="200" x2="600" y2="200" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line x1="-100" y1="300" x2="600" y2="300" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line x1="-100" y1="400" x2="600" y2="400" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line x1="-100" y1="500" x2="600" y2="500" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="-100" y2="600" x2="-100" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="000" y2="600" x2="000"/> <line y1="-100" x1="100" y2="600" x2="100" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="200" y2="600" x2="200" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="300" y2="600" x2="300" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="400" y2="600" x2="400" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> <line y1="-100" x1="500" y2="600" x2="500" stroke-dasharray="5,5"/> </g> <!-- Figure having vector effect --> <!-- A thick red right arrow and small rectangle on this figure's nested user coordinate system origin --> <path id="ve" vector-effect="none" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/> </svg> </g> </svg>
Below is an example of the non-scaling-size.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-scaling-size" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the non-rotation.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-rotation" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the non-scaling-size non-rotation.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-scaling-size non-rotation" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the fixed-position.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="fixed-position" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the non-scaling-size fixed-position.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-scaling-size fixed-position" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the non-rotation fixed-position.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-rotation fixed-position" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
Below is an example of the non-scaling-size non-rotation fixed-position.
Before changing CTM | After changing CTM |
<path id="ve" vector-effect="non-scaling-size non-rotation fixed-position" stroke="red" stroke-width="3" fill="none" transform="matrix(1,0,0,1,150,150)" d="M-50,-50 L50,-50 50,-100 150,0 50,100 50,50 -50,50 -50,-50z M5 0 L0 -5 -5 0 0 5z"/>
The SVGTransform interface is used to represent <transform-function> values that appear in the transform property and its presentation attributes ‘transform’, ‘gradientTransform’ and ‘patternTransform’. An SVGTransform represents a single component in a transform list, such as a single scale(…) or matrix(…) value.
An SVGTransform object can be designated as read only, which means that attempts to modify the object will result in an exception being thrown, as described below.
An SVGTransform object can be associated with a particular element. The associated element is used to determine which element's ‘transform’ presentation attribute to update if the object reflects that attribute. Unless otherwise described, an SVGTransform object is not associated with any element.
Every SVGTransform object operates in one of two modes. It can:
An SVGTransform object maintains an internal <transform-function> value, which is called its value. It also maintains a DOMMatrix object, which is called its matrix object, which is the object returned from the matrix IDL attribute. An SVGTransform object's matrix object is always kept synchronized with its value.
[Exposed=Window] interface SVGTransform { // Transform Types const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_UNKNOWN = 0; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_MATRIX = 1; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_TRANSLATE = 2; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_SCALE = 3; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_ROTATE = 4; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_SKEWX = 5; const unsigned short SVG_TRANSFORM_SKEWY = 6; readonly attribute unsigned short type; [SameObject] readonly attribute DOMMatrix matrix; readonly attribute float angle; void setMatrix(DOMMatrixReadOnly matrix); void setTranslate(float tx, float ty); void setScale(float sx, float sy); void setRotate(float angle, float cx, float cy); void setSkewX(float angle); void setSkewY(float angle); };
The numeric transform type constants defined on SVGTransform are used to represent the type of an SVGTransform's value. Their meanings are as follows:
Constant | Meaning |
---|---|
SVG_TRANSFORM_MATRIX | A matrix(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_TRANSLATE | A translate(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_SCALE | A scale(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_ROTATE | A rotate(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_SKEWX | A skewX(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_SKEWY | A skewY(…) value. |
SVG_TRANSFORM_UNKNOWN | Some other type of value. |
The use of numeric transform type constants is an anti-pattern and new constant values will not be introduced for any transform types supported by SVGTransform. If other types of transforms are supported and used, the SVGTransform uses the SVG_TRANSFORM_UNKNOWN type. See below for details on how the other properties of an SVGTransform operate with these types of transforms.
The type IDL attribute represents the type of transform item that the SVGTransform's value is. On getting type, the following steps are run:
For example, for a scaleX(…) or translate3d(…) transform, SVG_TRANSFORM_UNKNOWN would be returned.
The matrix IDL attribute represents the transform as a 4x4 homogeneous matrix, and on getting returns the SVGTransform's matrix object. When the matrix object is first created, its values are set to match the SVGTransform's transform function value, and is set to reflects the SVGTransform.
See the CSS Transforms specification for a description of how the different transform function types correspond to particular matrix values.
The angle IDL attribute represents the angle parameter of a rotate(…), skewX(…) or skewY(…) transform function. On getting, the following steps are run:
The setMatrix method is used to set the SVGTransform to a given matrix value. When setMatrix(matrix) is called, the following steps are run:
The setTranslate, setScale, setRotate, setSkewX and setSkewY methods are used to set the SVGTransform to a new transform function value. When one of these methods is called, the following steps are run:
This specification imposes additional requirements on the behavior of DOMMatrix objects beyond those described in the Geometry Interfaces specification, so that they can be used to reflect presentation attributes that take transform values.
Every DOMMatrix object operates in one of two modes. It can:
A DOMMatrix can be designated as read only, which means that attempts to modify the object will result in an exception being thrown. When assigning to any of a read only DOMMatrix's IDL attributes, or when invoking any of its mutable transform methods, a NoModificationAllowedError exception will be thrown instead of updating the internal value.
Note that this applies only to the read-write DOMMatrix interface; the DOMMatrixReadOnly interface, which is not used for reflecting transform, will already throw an exception if an attempt is made to modify it.
When assigning to any of a writable DOMMatrix's IDL attributes, or when invoking any of its mutable transform methods, the following steps are run after updating the internal matrix value:
The SVGTransformList interface is a list interface whose elements are SVGTransform objects. An SVGTransformList represents a value that the transform property can take, namely either a <transform-list> or the keyword none.
[Exposed=Window] interface SVGTransformList { readonly attribute unsigned long length; readonly attribute unsigned long numberOfItems; void clear(); SVGTransform initialize(SVGTransform newItem); getter SVGTransform getItem(unsigned long index); SVGTransform insertItemBefore(SVGTransform newItem, unsigned long index); SVGTransform replaceItem(SVGTransform newItem, unsigned long index); SVGTransform removeItem(unsigned long index); SVGTransform appendItem(SVGTransform newItem); setter void (unsigned long index, SVGTransform newItem); // Additional methods not common to other list interfaces. SVGTransform createSVGTransformFromMatrix(DOMMatrixReadOnly matrix); SVGTransform? consolidate(); };
The createSVGTransformFromMatrix method is used to create a new SVGTransform object from a matrix object. When the createSVGTransformFromMatrix(matrix) method is called, the following steps are run:
The consolidate method is used to convert the transform list into an equivalent transformation using a single transform function. When the consolidate() method is called, the following steps are run:
The behavior of all other interface members of SVGLengthList are defined in List interfaces.
An SVGAnimatedTransformList object is used to reflect the transform property and its corresponding presentation attribute (which, depending on the element, is ‘transform’, ‘gradientTransform’ or ‘patternTransform’).
[Exposed=Window] interface SVGAnimatedTransformList { [SameObject] readonly attribute SVGTransformList baseVal; [SameObject] readonly attribute SVGTransformList animVal; };
The baseVal and animVal IDL attributes represent the value of the reflected presentation attribute. On getting baseVal or animVal, an SVGTransformList object is returned that reflects the given presentation attribute.
The SVGPreserveAspectRatio interface is used to represent values for the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute.
An SVGPreserveAspectRatio object can be designated as read only, which means that attempts to modify the object will result in an exception being thrown, as described below.
Every SVGPreserveAspectRatio object reflects the base value of a reflected ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute (being exposed through the methods on the baseVal or animVal member of an SVGAnimatedPreserveAspectRatio).
[Exposed=Window] interface SVGPreserveAspectRatio { // Alignment Types const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_UNKNOWN = 0; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_NONE = 1; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMIN = 2; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMIN = 3; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMIN = 4; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMID = 5; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMID = 6; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMID = 7; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMAX = 8; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMAX = 9; const unsigned short SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMAX = 10; // Meet-or-slice Types const unsigned short SVG_MEETORSLICE_UNKNOWN = 0; const unsigned short SVG_MEETORSLICE_MEET = 1; const unsigned short SVG_MEETORSLICE_SLICE = 2; attribute unsigned short align; attribute unsigned short meetOrSlice; };
The numeric alignment type constants defined on SVGPreserveAspectRatio are used to represent the alignment keyword values that ‘preserveAspectRatio’ can take. Their meanings are as follows:
Constant | Meaning |
---|---|
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_NONE | The none keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMIN | The xMinYMin keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMIN | The xMidYMin keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMIN | The xMaxYMin keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMID | The xMinYMid keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMID | The xMidYMid keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMID | The xMaxYMid keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMINYMAX | The xMinYMax keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMIDYMAX | The xMidYMax keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_XMAXYMAX | The xMaxYMax keyword. |
SVG_PRESERVEASPECTRATIO_UNKNOWN | Some other type of value. |
Similarly, the numeric meet-or-slice type constants defined on SVGPreserveAspectRatio are used to represent the meet-or-slice keyword values that ‘preserveAspectRatio’ can take. Their meanings are as follows:
Constant | Meaning |
---|---|
SVG_MEETORSLICE_MEET | The meet keyword. |
SVG_MEETORSLICE_SLICE | The slice keyword. |
SVG_MEETORSLICE_UNKNOWN | Some other type of value. |
The align IDL attribute represents the alignment keyword part of the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ value. On getting, the following steps are run:
On setting align, the following steps are run:
The meetOrSlice IDL attribute represents the alignment keyword part of the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ value. On getting, the following steps are run:
On setting meetOrSlice, the following steps are run:
An SVGAnimatedPreserveAspectRatio object is used to reflect the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute.
[Exposed=Window] interface SVGAnimatedPreserveAspectRatio { [SameObject] readonly attribute SVGPreserveAspectRatio baseVal; [SameObject] readonly attribute SVGPreserveAspectRatio animVal; };
The baseVal and animVal IDL attributes represent the current non-animated value of the reflected ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute. On getting baseVal or animVal, an SVGPreserveAspectRatio object is returned that reflects the base value of the ‘preserveAspectRatio’ attribute on the SVG element that the object with the reflcting IDL attribute of type SVGAnimatedPreserveAspectRatio was obtained from.