The Scalable Vector Graphics format is used to describe the shape. That is why the separate namespace is used for that part of the file.
Each of the SVG drawing elements understands the style attribute. The attribute should be of the form:
<svg:whatever style="name1: value1; name2: value2; ... name42: value42"/>
Currently only the following style attributes are understood:
stroke-width
- The width of the line, relative to the
user specified width.
stroke-linecap
- The line cap style. One of
butt
,
round
,
square
,
projecting
(a synonym for square
),
or default
.
stroke-linejoin
- The line join style. One of
miter
,
round
,
bevel
or
default
.
stroke-pattern
- The dash pattern. One of
none
,
dashed
,
dash-dot
,
dash-dot-dot
,
dotted
or default
.
stroke-dashlength
- The length of the dashes in the dash pattern, in
relation to the user selected value (default
is a
synonym for 1.0).
stroke
- The stroke colour. You can use one of the symbolic names
foreground
,
fg
,
default
,
background
,
bg inverse
,
text
or none
, or use a hex colour value of the form
#rrggbb
.
fill
- The fill colour. The same values as for stroke are used,
except that the meaning of
default
and
inverse
are
exchanged. By default, elements are not filled, so to get
the default fill, use "fill: default
"
So to draw a rectangle with a hairline stroke, the following would do the trick:
|
Ordinates x and y grow as in Dia.
The recognised drawing elements are:
<svg:g>
This is the group element. You can place other drawing elements inside it. The contents of the style attribute on a group element will propagate to the contained elements (unless they override it).
<svg:line x1="..." y1="..." x2="..." y2="..."/>
This element is a line.
<svg:polyline points="...."/>
This is a polyline. That is, a number of connected line segments. The points attribute holds the coordinates of the end points for the line segments. The coordinates are separated by white space or commas. The suggested format is "x1,y1 x2,y2 x3,y3 ...".
<svg:polygon points="...."/>
This is a polygon. The points argument has the same format as the polyline.
<svg:rect x1="..." y1="..." width="..." height="..."/>
This is a rectangle. The upper left corner is (x1,y1), and the lower right corner is (x1+width,y1+height).
<svg:image x1="..." y1="..." width="..." height="..." xlink:href="..." />
This is an external image. The upper left corner is (x1,y1), and the
lower right corner is (x1+width,y1+height).
Their are two forms of links supported, an absolute filename of the form
"file:///home/user/image.png
" or a relative one
without the "file://
" prefix
like in "image.png
". The latter form is
preferred because it is installation
independent. The filename is relative to the shape file placement. In the
above example PNG and shape need to be in the same directory.
Inlined image data is also supported with xlink:href="data:image/png;base64,..."
<svg:circle cx="..." cy="..." r="..."/>
This is a circle with centre (cx,cy) and radius r.
<svg:ellipse cx="..." cy="..." rx="..." ry="..."/>
This is a ellipse with centre (cx, cy) and radius rx in the x direction and ry in the y direction.
<svg:path d="...."/>
This is the most complicated drawing element. It describes a path
made up of line segments and bezier curves. It currently does not
support the elliptic arc or quadratic bezier curves. The d string
is made up of a number of commands of the form
"x arg1 arg2 ...
"
where x is a character code identifying the command, and the
arguments are numbers separated by white space or commas. Each
command has an absolute and relative variant. The absolute one are
spelled with an upper case letter. The relative ones are spelled with
a lower case letter, and use the end point of the previous command
as the origin.
The supported commands are:
M x,y
- Move cursor
L x,y
- Draw a line to (x,y)
H x
- Draw a horizontal line to x
V y
- Draw a vertical line to y
C x1,y1 x2,y2, x3,y3
- Draw a bezier curve to
(x3,y3) with (x1,y1) and (x2,y2) as control points. C (uppercase) indicates
that absolute coordinates will follow; c (lowercase) indicates that relative
coordinates will follow.
S x1,y1 x2,y2
- Same as above, but draw a `smooth'
bezier. That is, infer the first control point from
the previous bezier. S (uppercase) indicates that absolute coordinates will
follow; s (lowercase) indicates that relative coordinates will follow.
A (rx ry x-axis-rotation large-arc-flag sweep-flag x y)+
-
Draw an elliptical arc from the current point to (x, y). The size and orientation
of the ellipse are defined by two radii (rx, ry) and an x-axis-rotation.
The center is automatically calculated. large-arc-flag and sweep-flag contribute
to the automatic calculations and help determine how the arc is drawn.
A (uppercase) indicates that absolute coordinates will follow; a (lowercase)
indicates that relative coordinates will follow.
Z
- Close the path.
If the path is closed with z
or
Z
, then it can be filled.
Otherwise, it will just be drawn.
<svg:text x="..." y="..." style="...">...</svg:text>
A text in the shape. The text has to be enclosed in the tags
The parameters are:
x,y
- The text position
style
- Text formatting options
The following style options are supported:
font-size
- font size in pt