SVG::Manual(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation SVG::Manual(3)NAME
SVG - Perl extension for generating Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG)
documents
VERSION
Covers SVG-2.47 distribution, December 2008
SYNOPSIS
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use strict;
use SVG;
# create an SVG object
my $svg= SVG->new(width=>200,height=>200);
#or
my $svg= SVG->new(width=>200,height=>200);
# use explicit element constructor to generate a group element
my $y=$svg->group(
id => 'group_y',
style => { stroke=>'red', fill=>'green' }
);
# add a circle to the group
$y->circle(cx=>100, cy=>100, r=>50, id=>'circle_in_group_y');
# or, use the generic 'tag' method to generate a group element by name
my $z=$svg->tag('g',
id => 'group_z',
style => {
stroke => 'rgb(100,200,50)',
fill => 'rgb(10,100,150)'
}
);
# create and add a circle using the generic 'tag' method
$z->tag('circle', cx=>50, cy=>50, r=>100, id=>'circle_in_group_z');
# create an anchor on a rectangle within a group within the group z
my $k = $z->anchor(
id => 'anchor_k',
-href => 'http://test.hackmare.com/',
target => 'new_window_0'
)->rectangle(
x => 20, y => 50,
width => 20, height => 30,
rx => 10, ry => 5,
id => 'rect_k_in_anchor_k_in_group_z'
);
# now render the SVG object, implicitly use svg namespace
print $svg->xmlify;
# or render a child node of the SVG object without rendering the entire object
print $k->xmlify; #renders the anchor $k above containing a rectangle, but does not
#render any of the ancestor nodes of $k
# or, explicitly use svg namespace and generate a document with its own DTD
print $svg->xmlify(-namespace=>'svg');
# or, explicitly use svg namespace and generate an inline docunent
print $svg->xmlify(
-namespace => "svg",
-pubid => "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN",
-inline => 1
);
DESCRIPTION
SVG is a 100% Perl module which generates a nested data structure
containing the DOM representation of an SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics)
image. Using SVG, you can generate SVG objects, embed other SVG
instances into it, access the DOM object, create and access javascript,
and generate SMIL animation content.
General Steps to generating an SVG document
Generating SVG is a simple three step process:
1 The first step is to construct a new SVG object with "new".
2 The second step is to call element constructors to create SVG elements.
Examples of element constructors are "circle" and "path".
3 The third and last step is to render the SVG object into XML using the
"xmlify" method.
The "xmlify" method takes a number of optional arguments that control
how SVG renders the object into XML, and in particular determine
whether a standalone SVG document or an inline SVG document fragment is
generated:
-standalone
A complete SVG document with its own associated DTD. A namespace for
the SVG elements may be optionally specified.
-inline
An inline SVG document fragment with no DTD that be embedded within
other XML content. As with standalone documents, an alternate namespace
may be specified.
No XML content is generated until the third step is reached. Up until
this point, all constructed element definitions reside in a DOM-like
data structure from which they can be accessed and modified.
EXPORTS
None. However, SVG permits both options and additional element methods
to be specified in the import list. These options and elements are then
available for all SVG instances that are created with the "new"
constructor. For example, to change the indent string to two spaces per
level:
use SVG (-indent => " ");
With the exception of -auto, all options may also be specified to the
"new" constructor. The currently supported options and their default
value are:
# processing options
-auto => 0, # permit arbitrary autoloading of all unrecognised elements
-printerror => 1, # print error messages to STDERR
-raiseerror => 1, # die on errors (implies -printerror)
# rendering options
-indent => "\t", # what to indent with
-elsep => "\n", # element line (vertical) separator
# (note that not all agents ignor trailing blanks)
-nocredits => 0, # enable/disable credit note comment
-namespace => '', # The root element's (and it's children's) namespace prefix
# XML and Doctype declarations
-inline => 0, # inline or stand alone
-docroot => 'svg', # The document's root element
-version => '1.0',
-extension => '',
-encoding => 'UTF-8',
-xml_svg => 'http://www.w3.org/2000/svg', # the svg xmlns attribute
-xml_xlink => 'http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink', # the svg tag xmlns:xlink attribute
-standalone => 'yes',
-pubid => "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN", # formerly -identifier
-sysid => 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-SVG-20010904/DTD/svg10.dtd', # the system id
SVG also allows additional element generation methods to be specified
in the import list. For example to generate 'star' and 'planet' element
methods:
use SVG qw(star planet);
or:
use SVG ("star","planet");
This will add 'star' to the list of elements supported by SVG.pm (but
not of course other SVG parsers...). Alternatively the '-auto' option
will allow any unknown method call to generate an element of the same
name:
use SVG (-auto => 1, "star", "planet");
Any elements specified explicitly (as 'star' and 'planet' are here) are
predeclared; other elements are defined as and when they are seen by
Perl. Note that enabling '-auto' effectively disables compile-time
syntax checking for valid method names.
Example:
use SVG (
-auto => 0,
-indent => " ",
-raiseerror => 0,
-printerror => 1,
"star", "planet", "moon"
);
Default SVG tag
The Default SVG tag will generate the following XML:
$svg = new SVG;
print $svg->xmlify;
Resulting XML snippet:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-SVG-20010904/DTD/svg10.dtd">
<svg height="100%" width="100%" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:svg="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">
<!--
Generated using the Perl SVG Module V2.50
by Ronan Oger
Info: http://www.roitsystems.com/
-->
SEE ALSOperl(1), SVG::XML, SVG::Element, SVG::DOM, SVG::Parser
<http://www.roitsystems.com/>ROIT Systems: Commercial SVG perl
solutions <http://www.w3c.org/Graphics/SVG/>SVG at the W3C
AUTHOR
Ronan Oger, RO IT Systems GmbH, cpan@roitsystems.com
CREDITS
Peter Wainwright, Excellent ideas, beta-testing, writing SVG::Parser
and much of SVG::DOM. Fredo, http://www.penguin.at0.net/~fredo/ -
provided example code and initial feedback for early SVG.pm versions
and the idea of a simplified svg generator. Adam Schneider, Brial
Pilpre, Ian Hickson Martin Owens - SVG::DOM improvements in version
3.34
EXAMPLES
http://wiki.roitsystems.com/
See also the examples directory in this distribution which contain
several fully documented examples.
METHODS
SVG provides both explicit and generic element constructor methods.
Explicit generators are generally (with a few exceptions) named for the
element they generate. If a tag method is required for a tag containing
hyphens, the method name replaces the hyphen with an underscore. ie: to
generate tag <column-heading id="new"> you would use method
$svg->column_heading(id=>'new').
All element constructors take a hash of element attributes and options;
element attributes such as 'id' or 'border' are passed by name, while
options for the method (such as the type of an element that supports
multiple alternate forms) are passed preceded by a hyphen, e.g '-type'.
Both types may be freely intermixed; see the "fe" method and code
examples througout the documentation for more examples.
new (constructor)
$svg = SVG->new(%attributes)
Creates a new SVG object. Attributes of the document SVG element be
passed as an optional list of key value pairs. Additionally, SVG
options (prefixed with a hyphen) may be set on a per object basis:
Example:
my $svg1=new SVG;
my $svg2=new SVG(id => 'document_element');
my $svg3=new SVG(s
-printerror => 1,
-raiseerror => 0,
-indent => ' ',
-docroot => 'svg', #default document root element (SVG specification assumes svg). Defaults to 'svg' if undefined
-sysid => 'abc', #optional system identifyer
-pubid => "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN", #public identifyer default value is "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN" if undefined
-namespace => 'mysvg',
-inline => 1
id => 'document_element',
width => 300,
height => 200,
);
Default SVG options may also be set in the import list. See "EXPORTS"
above for more on the available options.
Furthermore, the following options:
-version
-encoding
-standalone
-namespace Defines the document or element level namespace. The order of assignment priority is element,document .
-inline
-identifier
-nostub
-dtd (standalone)
may also be set in xmlify, overriding any corresponding values set in
the SVG->new declaration
xmlify (alias: to_xml render serialise serialize)
$string = $svg->xmlify(%attributes);
Returns xml representation of svg document.
XML Declaration
Name Default Value
-version '1.0'
-encoding 'UTF-8'
-standalone 'yes'
-namespace 'svg' - namespace for elements
-inline '0' - If '1', then this is an inline document.
-pubid '-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.0//EN';
-dtd (standalone) 'http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-SVG-20010904/DTD/svg10.dtd'
tag (alias: element)
$tag = $svg->tag($name, %attributes)
Generic element generator. Creates the element named $name with the
attributes specified in %attributes. This method is the basis of most
of the explicit element generators.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->tag('g', transform=>'rotate(-45)');
anchor
$tag = $svg->anchor(%attributes)
Generate an anchor element. Anchors are put around objects to make them
'live' (i.e. clickable). It therefore requires a drawn object or group
element as a child.
Example:
# generate an anchor
$tag = $svg->anchor(
-href=>'http://here.com/some/simpler/svg.svg'
);
# add a circle to the anchor. The circle can be clicked on.
$tag->circle(cx=>10,cy=>10,r=>1);
# more complex anchor with both URL and target
$tag = $svg->anchor(
-href => 'http://somewhere.org/some/other/page.html',
target => 'new_window'
);
circle
$tag = $svg->circle(%attributes)
Draw a circle at (cx,cy) with radius r.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->circle(cx=>4, cy=>2, r=>1);
ellipse
$tag = $svg->ellipse(%attributes)
Draw an ellipse at (cx,cy) with radii rx,ry.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->ellipse(
cx=>10, cy=>10,
rx=>5, ry=>7,
id=>'ellipse',
style=>{
'stroke'=>'red',
'fill'=>'green',
'stroke-width'=>'4',
'stroke-opacity'=>'0.5',
'fill-opacity'=>'0.2'
}
);
rectangle (alias: rect)
$tag = $svg->rectangle(%attributes)
Draw a rectangle at (x,y) with width 'width' and height 'height' and
side radii 'rx' and 'ry'.
Example:
$tag = $svg->rectangle(
x=>10, y=>20,
width=>4, height=>5,
rx=>5.2, ry=>2.4,
id=>'rect_1'
);
image
$tag = $svg->image(%attributes)
Draw an image at (x,y) with width 'width' and height 'height' linked to
image resource '-href'. See also "use".
Example:
$tag = $svg->image(
x=>100, y=>100,
width=>300, height=>200,
'-href'=>"image.png", #may also embed SVG, e.g. "image.svg"
id=>'image_1'
);
Output:
<image xlink:href="image.png" x="100" y="100" width="300" height="200"/>
use
$tag = $svg->use(%attributes)
Retrieve the content from an entity within an SVG document and apply it
at (x,y) with width 'width' and height 'height' linked to image
resource '-href'.
Example:
$tag = $svg->use(
x=>100, y=>100,
width=>300, height=>200,
'-href'=>"pic.svg#image_1",
id=>'image_1'
);
Output:
<use xlink:href="pic.svg#image_1" x="100" y="100" width="300" height="200"/>
According to the SVG specification, the 'use' element in SVG can point
to a single element within an external SVG file.
polygon
$tag = $svg->polygon(%attributes)
Draw an n-sided polygon with vertices at points defined by a string of
the form 'x1,y1,x2,y2,x3,y3,... xy,yn'. The "get_path" method is
provided as a convenience to generate a suitable string from coordinate
data.
Example:
# a five-sided polygon
my $xv = [0,2,4,5,1];
my $yv = [0,0,2,7,5];
$points = $a->get_path(
x=>$xv, y=>$yv,
-type=>'polygon'
);
$c = $a->polygon(
%$points,
id=>'pgon1',
style=>\%polygon_style
);
SEE ALSO:
"polyline", "path", "get_path".
polyline
$tag = $svg->polyline(%attributes)
Draw an n-point polyline with points defined by a string of the form
'x1,y1,x2,y2,x3,y3,... xy,yn'. The "get_path" method is provided as a
convenience to generate a suitable string from coordinate data.
Example:
# a 10-pointsaw-tooth pattern
my $xv = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9];
my $yv = [0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1];
$points = $a->get_path(
x=>$xv, y=>$yv,
-type=>'polyline',
-closed=>'true' #specify that the polyline is closed.
);
my $tag = $a->polyline (
%$points,
id=>'pline_1',
style=>{
'fill-opacity'=>0,
'stroke-color'=>'rgb(250,123,23)'
}
);
line
$tag = $svg->line(%attributes)
Draw a straight line between two points (x1,y1) and (x2,y2).
Example:
my $tag = $svg->line(
id=>'l1',
x1=>0, y1=>10,
x2=>10, y2=>0
);
To draw multiple connected lines, use "polyline".
text
$text = $svg->text(%attributes)->cdata();
$text_path = $svg->text(-type=>'path'); $text_span =
$text_path->text(-type=>'span')->cdata('A'); $text_span =
$text_path->text(-type=>'span')->cdata('B'); $text_span =
$text_path->text(-type=>'span')->cdata('C');
define the container for a text string to be drawn in the image.
Input:
-type = path type (path | polyline | polygon)
-type = text element type (path | span | normal [default])
Example:
my $text1 = $svg->text(
id=>'l1', x=>10, y=>10
)->cdata('hello, world');
my $text2 = $svg->text(
id=>'l1', x=>10, y=>10, -cdata=>'hello, world');
my $text = $svg->text(
id=>'tp', x=>10, y=>10 -type=>path)
->text(id=>'ts' -type=>'span')
->cdata('hello, world');
SEE ALSO:
L<"desc">, L<"cdata">.
title
$tag = $svg->title(%attributes)
Generate the title of the image.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->title(id=>'document-title')->cdata('This is the title');
desc
$tag = $svg->desc(%attributes)
Generate the description of the image.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->desc(id=>'document-desc')->cdata('This is a description');
comment
$tag = $svg->comment(@comments)
Generate the description of the image.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->comment('comment 1','comment 2','comment 3');
pi (Processing Instruction)
$tag = $svg->pi(@pi)
Generate a set of processing instructions
Example:
my $tag = $svg->pi('instruction one','instruction two','instruction three');
returns:
<lt>?instruction one?<gt>
<lt>?instruction two?<gt>
<lt>?instruction three?<gt>
script
$tag = $svg->script(%attributes)
Generate a script container for dynamic (client-side) scripting using
ECMAscript, Javascript or other compatible scripting language.
Example:
my $tag = $svg->script(-type=>"text/ecmascript");
#or my $tag = $svg->script();
#note that type ecmascript is not Mozilla compliant
# populate the script tag with cdata
# be careful to manage the javascript line ends.
# qq|text| or qqXtextX where text is the script
# works well for this.
#make sure to use the CAPITAL CDATA to poulate the script.
$tag->CDATA(qq|function d(){
//simple display function
for(cnt = 0; cnt < d.length; cnt++)
document.write(d[cnt]);//end for loop
document.write("<BR>");//write a line break
}|
);
path
$tag = $svg->path(%attributes)
Draw a path element. The path vertices may be imputed as a parameter or
calculated usingthe "get_path" method.
Example:
# a 10-pointsaw-tooth pattern drawn with a path definition
my $xv = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9];
my $yv = [0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1,0,1];
$points = $a->get_path(
x => $xv,
y => $yv,
-type => 'path',
-closed => 'true' #specify that the polyline is closed
);
$tag = $svg->path(
%$points,
id => 'pline_1',
style => {
'fill-opacity' => 0,
'fill-color' => 'green',
'stroke-color' => 'rgb(250,123,23)'
}
);
SEE ALSO:
"get_path".
get_path
$path = $svg->get_path(%attributes)
Returns the text string of points correctly formatted to be
incorporated into the multi-point SVG drawing object definitions (path,
polyline, polygon)
Input: attributes including:
-type = path type (path | polyline | polygon)
x = reference to array of x coordinates
y = reference to array of y coordinates
Output: a hash reference consisting of the following key-value pair:
points = the appropriate points-definition string
-type = path|polygon|polyline
-relative = 1 (define relative position rather than absolute position)
-closed = 1 (close the curve - path and polygon only)
Example:
#generate an open path definition for a path.
my ($points,$p);
$points = $svg->get_path(x=>\@x,y=>\@y,-relative=>1,-type=>'path');
#add the path to the SVG document
my $p = $svg->path(%$path, style=>\%style_definition);
#generate an closed path definition for a a polyline.
$points = $svg->get_path(
x=>\@x,
y=>\@y,
-relative=>1,
-type=>'polyline',
-closed=>1
); # generate a closed path definition for a polyline
# add the polyline to the SVG document
$p = $svg->polyline(%$points, id=>'pline1');
Aliases: get_path set_path
animate
$tag = $svg->animate(%attributes)
Generate an SMIL animation tag. This is allowed within any nonempty
tag. Refer\ to the W3C for detailed information on the subtleties of
the animate SMIL commands.
Inputs: -method = Transform | Motion | Color
my $an_ellipse = $svg->ellipse(
cx=>30,cy=>150,rx=>10,ry=>10,id=>'an_ellipse',
stroke=>'rgb(130,220,70)',fill=>'rgb(30,20,50)');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"cx",values=>"20; 200; 20",dur=>"10s", repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"rx",values=>"10;30;20;100;50",
dur=>"10s", repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"ry",values=>"30;50;10;20;70;150",
dur=>"15s", repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"rx",values=>"30;75;10;100;20;20;150",
dur=>"20s", repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"fill",values=>"red;green;blue;cyan;yellow",
dur=>"5s", repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"fill-opacity",values=>"0;1;0.5;0.75;1",
dur=>"20s",repeatDur=>'indefinite');
$an_ellipse-> animate(
attributeName=>"stroke-width",values=>"1;3;2;10;5",
dur=>"20s",repeatDur=>'indefinite');
group
$tag = $svg->group(%attributes)
Define a group of objects with common properties. groups can have
style, animation, filters, transformations, and mouse actions assigned
to them.
Example:
$tag = $svg->group(
id => 'xvs000248',
style => {
'font' => [ qw( Arial Helvetica sans ) ],
'font-size' => 10,
'fill' => 'red',
},
transform => 'rotate(-45)'
);
defs
$tag = $svg->defs(%attributes)
define a definition segment. A Defs requires children when defined
using SVG.pm Example:
$tag = $svg->defs(id => 'def_con_one',);
style
$svg->tag('style', %styledef);
Sets/Adds style-definition for the following objects being created.
Style definitions apply to an object and all its children for all
properties for which the value of the property is not redefined by the
child.
mouseaction
$svg->mouseaction(%attributes)
Sets/Adds mouse action definitions for tag
$svg->attrib($name, $value)
Sets/Adds mouse action definitions.
$svg->attrib $name, $value
$svg->attrib $name, \@value
$svg->attrib $name, \%value
Sets/Replaces attributes for a tag.
cdata
$svg->cdata($text)
Sets cdata to $text. SVG.pm allows you to set cdata for any tag. If the
tag is meant to be an empty tag, SVG.pm will not complain, but the
rendering agent will fail. In the SVG DTD, cdata is generally only
meant for adding text or script content.
Example:
$svg->text(
style => {
'font' => 'Arial',
'font-size' => 20
})->cdata('SVG.pm is a perl module on CPAN!');
my $text = $svg->text(style=>{'font'=>'Arial','font-size'=>20});
$text->cdata('SVG.pm is a perl module on CPAN!');
Result:
E<lt>text style="font: Arial; font-size: 20" E<gt>SVG.pm is a perl module on CPAN!E<lt>/text E<gt>
SEE ALSO:
L<"CDATA"> L<"desc">, L<"title">, L<"text">, L<"script">.
cdata_noxmlesc
$script = $svg->script();
$script->cdata_noxmlesc($text);
Generates cdata content for text and similar tags which do not get xml-
escaped. In othe words, does not parse the content and inserts the
exact string into the cdata location.
CDATA
$script = $svg->script();
$script->CDATA($text);
Generates a <![CDATA[ ... ]]> tag with the contents of $text rendered
exactly as supplied. SVG.pm allows you to set cdata for any tag. If the
tag is meant to be an empty tag, SVG.pm will not complain, but the
rendering agent will fail. In the SVG DTD, cdata is generally only
meant for adding text or script content.
Example:
my $text = qqX
var SVGDoc;
var groups = new Array();
var last_group;
/*****
*
* init
*
* Find this SVG's document element
* Define members of each group by id
*
*****/
function init(e) {
SVGDoc = e.getTarget().getOwnerDocument();
append_group(1, 4, 6); // group 0
append_group(5, 4, 3); // group 1
append_group(2, 3); // group 2
}X;
$svg->script()->CDATA($text);
Result:
E<lt>script E<gt>
<gt>![CDATA[
var SVGDoc;
var groups = new Array();
var last_group;
/*****
*
* init
*
* Find this SVG's document element
* Define members of each group by id
*
*****/
function init(e) {
SVGDoc = e.getTarget().getOwnerDocument();
append_group(1, 4, 6); // group 0
append_group(5, 4, 3); // group 1
append_group(2, 3); // group 2
}
]]E<gt>
SEE ALSO:
L<"cdata">, L<"script">.
xmlescp and xmlescape
$string = $svg->xmlescp($string) $string = $svg->xmlesc($string)
$string = $svg->xmlescape($string)
SVG module does not xml-escape characters that are incompatible with
the XML specification. xmlescp and xmlescape provides this
functionality. It is a helper function which generates an XML-escaped
string for reserved characters such as ampersand, open and close
brackets, etcetera.
The behaviour of xmlesc is to apply the following transformation to the
input string $s:
$s=~s/&(?!#(x\w\w|\d+?);)/&/g;
$s=~s/>/>/g;
$s=~s/</</g;
$s=~s/\"/"/g;
$s=~s/\'/'/g;
$s=~s/([\x00-\x08\x0b\x1f])/''/eg;
$s=~s/([\200-\377])/''.ord($1).';'/ge;
filter
$tag = $svg->filter(%attributes)
Generate a filter. Filter elements contain "fe" filter sub-elements.
Example:
my $filter = $svg->filter(
filterUnits=>"objectBoundingBox",
x=>"-10%",
y=>"-10%",
width=>"150%",
height=>"150%",
filterUnits=>'objectBoundingBox'
);
$filter->fe();
SEE ALSO:
"fe".
fe
$tag = $svg->fe(-type=>'type', %attributes)
Generate a filter sub-element. Must be a child of a "filter" element.
Example:
my $fe = $svg->fe(
-type => 'DiffuseLighting' # required - element name omiting 'fe'
id => 'filter_1',
style => {
'font' => [ qw(Arial Helvetica sans) ],
'font-size' => 10,
'fill' => 'red',
},
transform => 'rotate(-45)'
);
Note that the following filter elements are currently supported:
* feBlend
* feColorMatrix
* feComponentTransfer
* feComposite
* feConvolveMatrix
* feDiffuseLighting
* feDisplacementMap
* feDistantLight
* feFlood
* feFuncA
* feFuncB
* feFuncG
* feFuncR
* feGaussianBlur
* feImage
* feMerge
* feMergeNode
* feMorphology
* feOffset
* fePointLight
* feSpecularLighting
* feSpotLight
* feTile
* feTurbulence
SEE ALSO:
"filter".
pattern
$tag = $svg->pattern(%attributes)
Define a pattern for later reference by url.
Example:
my $pattern = $svg->pattern(
id => "Argyle_1",
width => "50",
height => "50",
patternUnits => "userSpaceOnUse",
patternContentUnits => "userSpaceOnUse"
);
set
$tag = $svg->set(%attributes)
Set a definition for an SVG object in one section, to be referenced in
other sections as needed.
Example:
my $set = $svg->set(
id => "Argyle_1",
width => "50",
height => "50",
patternUnits => "userSpaceOnUse",
patternContentUnits => "userSpaceOnUse"
);
stop
$tag = $svg->stop(%attributes)
Define a stop boundary for "gradient"
Example:
my $pattern = $svg->stop(
id => "Argyle_1",
width => "50",
height => "50",
patternUnits => "userSpaceOnUse",
patternContentUnits => "userSpaceOnUse"
);
$tag = $svg->gradient(%attributes)
Define a color gradient. Can be of type linear or radial
Example:
my $gradient = $svg->gradient(
-type => "linear",
id => "gradient_1"
);
GENERIC ELEMENT METHODS
The following elements are generically supported by SVG:
* altGlyph
* altGlyphDef
* altGlyphItem
* clipPath
* color-profile
* cursor
* definition-src
* font-face-format
* font-face-name
* font-face-src
* font-face-url
* foreignObject
* glyph
* glyphRef
* hkern
* marker
* mask
* metadata
* missing-glyph
* mpath
* switch
* symbol
* tref
* view
* vkern
See e.g. "pattern" for an example of the use of these methods.
METHODS IMPORTED BY SVG::DOM
The following SVG::DOM elements are accessible through SVG:
* getChildren
* getFirstChild
* getNextChild
* getLastChild
* getParent
* getParentElement
* getSiblings
* getElementByID
* getElementID
* getElements
* getElementName
* getType
* getAttributes
* getAttribute
* setAttributes
* setAttribute
* insertBefore
* insertAfter
* insertSiblingBefore
* insertSiblingAfter
* replaceChild
* removeChild
* cloneNode
LICENSE
SVG.pl is distributed under the same license as Perl itself. It is
provided free of warranty and may be re-used freely.
SEE ALSOperl(1), SVG, SVG::DOM, SVG::XML, SVG::Element, SVG::Parser,
SVG::Manual, SVG::Extension Serverside SVG Portal - Perl focused SVG
site with discussion board and examples: <http://www.roitsystems.com/>
<http://www.perlsvg.com/> SVG at the W3C:
<http://www.w3c.org/Graphics/SVG/> For Commercial Perl/SVG development,
refer to the following sites: RO IT Systems:
<http://www.roitsystems.com/>
perl v5.10.1 2010-04-06 SVG::Manual(3)