Science, asked by bunny8953, 1 year ago

What is SVG and advantages of SVG?

Answers

Answered by yashsoni21
1
What is SVG?

SVG stands for Scalable Vector Graphics

SVG is used to define vector-based graphics for the Web

SVG defines the graphics in XML format

Every element and every attribute in SVG files can be animated

SVG is a W3C recommendation

SVG integrates with other W3C standards such as the DOM and XSL

SVG Tutorial

❮ PreviousNext ❯

SVG stands for Scalable Vector Graphics.

SVG defines vector-based graphics in XML format.

Examples in Each Chapter

With our "Try it Yourself" editor, you can edit the SVG, and click on a button to view the result.

SVG Example

<html>
<body>

<h1>My first SVG</h1>

<svg width="100"height="100">
  <circle cx="50"cy="50" r="40"stroke="green" stroke-width="4" fill="yellow"/>
</svg>

</body>
</html>

Try it Yourself »

What you should already know

Before you continue, you should have some basic understanding of the following:

HTML

Basic XML

If you want to study these subjects first, find the tutorials on our Home page.

What is SVG?

SVG stands for Scalable Vector Graphics

SVG is used to define vector-based graphics for the Web

SVG defines the graphics in XML format

Every element and every attribute in SVG files can be animated

SVG is a W3C recommendation

SVG integrates with other W3C standards such as the DOM and XSL

SVG is a W3C Recommendation

SVG 1.0 became a W3C Recommendation on 4 September 2001.

SVG 1.1 became a W3C Recommendation on 14 January 2003.

SVG 1.1 (Second Edition) became a W3C Recommendation on 16 August 2011.

SVG Advantages

Advantages of using SVG over other image formats (like JPEG and GIF) are:

SVG images can be created and edited with any text editor

SVG images can be searched, indexed, scripted, and compressed

SVG images are scalable

SVG images can be printed with high quality at any resolution

SVG images are zoomable

SVG graphics do NOT lose any quality if they are zoomed or resized

SVG is an open standard

SVG files are pure XML


Similar questions