titles, even though they were supposed to be
italicized. In my case, though, I really did need the
overlineunderline option:
http://cs.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/2011/simplePuns.svg [1]
This doesn't work in FF or Opera, but it does in ASV.
cheers
David
On Sun 10/16
ON MON 10/17/11 11:56 AM , JOHN DELACOUR
Please point me to some SMIL animations that are not jerky in
Firefox
and Opera [snip]
http://cs.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/2011/Galorie.html [1]
Generally, support for SMIL animation across browsers follows this
ordering
The organizing committee for SVG Open has pushed back the deadline
for submission of abstracts to May 15th.
(see http://www.w3.org/News/2011#entry-9074 [1] for confirmation of
said claim)
We haven't yet changed the date on the SVG Open site, but in case
you missed the
I believe the examples in
http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/IG/resources/svgprimer.html#scripting_HTML work
in all browsers.
cheers
David
- Original Message -
From: profileofpradeep
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2011 2:09 AM
Subject:
Hi Jan,
Not sure if this is what you have in mind, but perhaps experiment with
something like this:
svg xmlns=http://www.w3.org/2000/svg;
xmlns:xlink=http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink;
path id=path0 d=M10 150C65.228 150 110 194.772 110 250C110 305.228
65.228 350 10 350 stroke=green fill=none/
Very cool indeed! It is exactly this graph-theoretic interconnectivity between
filter primitives and their intermediate stages (captured so nicely with the
flow-chart model that Christian is using) that makes them powerful and a bit
tricky to wield.
My students (in several continents) will be
Hi Patrick,
A couple of things come to mind:
1. this is sort of cool but doesn't answer your question and has nothing to do
with filters. but it is a bit bubble-gummy:
http://www.themaninblue.com/experiment/Blobular/ (I think I tried it in Opera
and FF4 but it didn't work in ASV)
(I just ran
I was intrigued by feDisplacement, but I cannot seem to control (or figure out
how to control) the direction of the displacement.
Yes, I've had trouble controlling the thing precisely. The little experiments
with the checkerboard, are an attempt to calibrate those effects, here's
another
Hi Raks,
I recently gave up my i-phone so my feedback isn't what you're looking for,
though from my experience i-phone SVG in Safari is much like Windows Safari
only slower.
I got very different behavior from your example in four of the five browsers I
tested:
Opera -- pretty sure I see what
.
Specifically under the heading The programs there is an item:
1. Run time vs. render time and how to measure.
but that is not linked to anything.
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey ddailey@... wrote:
Here's an approach I used in a paper for the SVG2007:
http
Back some time ago, there was discussion
(http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/svg-developers/message/59832 [1]
) about making brick patterns in SVG, with perspective.
I don't recall all of the discussion that ensued, but here's a
solution using :
Here's an approach I used in a paper for the SVG2007:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/SVGOpen2007/SVGOpen2007.htm
I was interested, among other things, in how JavaScript and SMIL animations
interacted, and in the effect of overstuffing the SVG DOM with lots of content.
cheers
David
I just solved one of those problems that I wrote about in my last message:
#2 -- One apparently doesn't have a document within the SVG node -- you just
acess the elements within it as though they are childNodes. Of course that
means that a statement like
Some of my students have started turning in projects in which they use SVG
inline in HTML5. So I figured it was time for me to figure something out about
it.
Based on this little thing [1] that works in all browsers, I decided just to
put the SVG inside an HTML container to see what I could
; id=SVG onload=startup()
rect width=100% height=100% fill=white /
circle r=50 /
text font-size=12 x=50 y=20 onclick=removeIt()Click something to
remove it/text
text font-size=12 x=50 y=80Click nothing to add something/text
/svg/html
- Original Message -
From: ddailey
To: svg
Here's a simple test that all browsers that I have tested fail:
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/textPatternRotate.svg
It's the first time I've ever seen Safari for Windows actually do the best job
for something SVG-related, and so, is noteworthy for that alone!
Here's the code
Chaals writes:
Actually, the activation should be defined by the User Agent (most of the
touch devices we work with don't have ctrl- or alt- keys.
Well, yes, there are already plenty of places where touch devices can't handle
certain things, but then there are already plenty of places where
If I understand Robert Longson's recent reply to a series of
questions I had about styling and measuring s, it is because they
don't have an SVGTransformable interface, that we can't measure them
with getBBox, but have to instead use getExtentOfChar . Why doesn't
have a transformable
://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/tspanmeasure.svg while ASV, Opera, Chrome
and Safari are all wrong (albeit for different reasons in each case)? It looks
like Chrome has just a different manifestation of uncertainty about how to
apply getExtentofChar in cases of scaled or kerned text.
What I'm trying to do
Howdy!
When these messages were going on I hadn't had a chance to even look to see if
Opera 11 was doing anything different than in the past, so this morning I took
the opportunity. Noteworthy is that that there are now lots of things that DO
work in Opera 11 which never used to work anywhere
David
- Original Message -
From: ddailey
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, January 04, 2011 5:13 PM
Subject: [svg-developers] trampolining and difficulties aligning text to its
overline
I have moved the introduction* of this to the end so as to save
In http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG/interact.html#EnableZoomAndPanControls it tells us
that SVG user agents that operate in interaction-capable user environments are
required to support the ability to magnify and pan.
I know how to zoom (or at least, I know how to enlarge a page -- which is a bit
Hi Jan,
I'm not sure if I quite understand your scenario, but a couple of quick
responses: first of all a path can have multiple M subcommands:
path d=M 100,350 300,100 500,350 z
M 250,320 250,220 350,220 350,320 z
fill=#ff8 stroke=black stroke-width=15 fill-rule=evenodd/
draws a triangle
Perhaps something like this is what you have in mind accomplishing:
I've made your triangle black and put it in a mask with a big white rectangle
underneath I had to mess with coordinates a bit to get it all to line up.
The mask is then applied to your group. In this way masks can be
/
/g
- Original Message -
From: ddailey
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, January 08, 2011 12:01 PM
Subject: Re: [svg-developers] Divide objects below the specified path
Perhaps something like this is what you have in mind accomplishing:
I've
Take a look at
http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/IG/resources/svgprimer.html#joint_use -- there
is an example there (look inside a table named Making SVG functions callable
from HTML ).
Basically, suppose the svg is linked from the html via object, embed or
iframe. And suppose the function
I have moved the introduction* of this to the end so as to save the reader from
my inspired prose.
While arming yourself with all available SVG viewers, consider the example at
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/tspanmeasure.svg
I was trying to top-justify the word Trampoline so that all
Hi and Happy New Year, indeed! The organizing committee should be making an
announcement within the next couple of weeks, I believe!
Please stay tuned to this channel!
cheers
David
- Original Message -
From: meikelneu
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, January
With script it is pretty easy. See, for example:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/curve.svg
hope this helps
David
- Original Message -
From: honyk
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, January 03, 2011 2:57 PM
Subject: [svg-developers] Graphics on path
Hi Jan,
I tried your example in Windows in Opera, IE+ASV and Firefox 4beta and was able
to see the 20 just fine in all three. I was able to replicate your problem.
though in Chrome (which usually agrees with Safari).
The SVG support in those first three is more mature and stable than in the
Hi Kenneth,
Using Opera, Safari, Firefox and IE+ASV in Windows, I don't see anything that I
would not be willing to attribute to retinal effects caused by the close
superimposition of red and blue (two mutually unfocusable colors according to
one of my undergrad intro psych texts -- I don't
Hi Chris,
Well, you know me... I like people to be happy, and Ollie's toy is just very
cool!
David
- Original Message -
From: Chris Peto
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, December 06, 2010 2:03 PM
Subject: RE: [svg-developers] Introducing me and my SVG toy
Well, this draws a grid from 0% to 100% both horizontally and vertically. Don't
know if it will be of help or not, but the code should be pretty easy to follow.
cheers
David
- Original Message -
From: Pranav Lal
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, December 05,
From: ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.netmailto:ddai...@zoominternet.net
Reply-To:
svg-developers@yahoogroups.commailto:svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
svg-developers@yahoogroups.commailto:svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun, 21 Nov 2010 22:12:52 +0100
To: svg-developers
Here's a little something I cobbled together in the past couple of days.
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/usmap.svg
It works in Opera, Firefox, Chrome and Safari, but not in ASV(IE). I've not
tested it in IE9, but would be interested to know if it works there.
I took a gnu-licensed SVG map from
I was going to say something about a felt need in the scientific community for
something that allows collaborative drawing, until I saw the part about fun.
Certainly the users should have the ability to introduce and launch flexible
shapes (having personalities, behavior, velocities,
Actually IE/ASV handles much arbitrary content inside a glyph see
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/gradientfont4.svg
in which rotating gradients are assigned to shapes layed out as text along text
paths to simulate non-linear gradients.
And as you know, ASV handles your example as
The example at http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/drag.svg may help.
There are objects of different complexity including clipPaths and groups that
are draggable. The clipPaths are working appropriately to my thinking in
Opera and IE/ASV but not in FF4b or WebKit (though I haven't tried
Challenge: come up with better symbols for signifying public domain or
copyright free.
Begin here http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/pd3.svg . Look at the source
code and then see what you think. I'll get back to that example toward the end
of this message.
As a bit of searching in Google
: if we relax the rules of English orthography just a bit,
so that instead of writing from left to write, we write from left to right, or
downward, or inward (by allowing glyphs to be inside one another) , can we
write legibly in less space?
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/canonical.svg
Thanks JC,
The page renders very nicely in Opera as well.
I had looked at this link before when you answered a question I asked here
about displaying Unicode in SVG, and have a note to myself to study it more
carefully when time lets me. But it is good to share and recast that
information
Hi Patrick,
Your presentation looked good to me. I think I'll ask all my students to take a
look too as the basic differences between the two are a bit tricky to
understand and I think you nailed it quite well. I found some of the text
examples early in the talk hard to read on my relatively
In this example: http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/notknot2.svg
I see the following results:
IE/ASV and FF4 agree with me about the timing...
Opera seems to synchronize the declarative animation differently between the
application of the mask and the vehicles...
Safari and Chrome do not
: Sunday, October 24, 2010 12:26 PM
Subject: [svg-developers] Re: setting an event handler
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey ddai...@... wrote:
Hi folks,
I've always used something like
O.setAttribute(onclick,add(evt))
to attach an event handler in SVG
: [svg-developers] Re: setting an event handler
ddailey schrieb am 23.10.2010 18:29:
I've always used something like
O.setAttribute(onclick,add(evt))
to attach an event handler in SVG. But someone told me recently that
O.addEventListener(click, function(evt){add(evt
Two quick and easy questions:
1. Where in the SVG 1.1 spec are these two topics (getTotalLength and
getPointAtLength) discussed. I tried searching and couldn't find 'em.
2. If a path is subjected to a transform then do these methods reflect the path
before or after the transform? ASV says after
Hi folks,
I've always used something like
O.setAttribute(onclick,add(evt))
to attach an event handler in SVG. But someone told me recently that
O.addEventListener(click, function(evt){add(evt)}, false)
is actually preferrable. (The person who told me this obviously has young
Hi folks,
I'm currently teaching a course with a lot of international students and a few
have complained about not being able to get special characters (as with umlauts
and the like) to display well in SVG. I haven't played with the issue much,
though we've seen fairly sizable variation in
Well, it's not real easy to explain but I'd suggest reading the parts of the C
and A subcommands of path at
http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/IG/resources/svgprimer.html#path
The inkscape code seems to be an approximation to what it really is. What I
think a rounded rect really is a path that
Jacob, Doug and Wade,
Thanks for your assistance here. It definitely helps!
regards
David
- Original Message -
From: Jacob Beard
To: svg-developers
Sent: Sunday, October 17, 2010 3:59 AM
Subject: Re: [svg-developers] explaining setAttribute, setAttributeNS and
carburetors
I don't really understand carburetors, but I have a vague idea that they
control the richness of the fuel mixture so as to calibrate the rate of
combustion in the engine -- for me, the following issue is similar.
Perhaps you can help. I'm trying to explain how to do a wee bit of DOM
scripting
version of a roller gear. To see a physical picture
of one see:
http://lumberjocks.com/projects/23791
All browsers work fine except IE. I haven't tested it with ASV.
Enjoy!
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey ddai...@... wrote:
Here are a couple of interesting examples
Thanks Robert!
I've gotten rid of the zeroes so that
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/animoval4.svg now works well everywhere
*but* Opera.
To be balanced, here's another one that seems to work properly *only* in Opera:
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/animoval8.svg
Anyone who has used
Here are a couple of interesting examples / difficult browser calisthenics:
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/animoval3.svg
and
http://granite.sru.edu/~ddailey/svg/animoval4.svg
The first works much as I think it should in Opera, Chrome and IE/ASV. FF4 runs
only one of the gears. Safari screws
@yahoogroups.com
Cc: ddailey ; Phil Archer
Sent: Saturday, October 09, 2010 2:25 AM
Subject: Re: [svg-developers] planetsvg.com down
Hi, David-
ddailey wrote (on 10/7/10 7:49 PM):
There used to be a link on svg.org that talked about server
configuration issues (mime types and the like
The FA(q) question of the best editor sometimes means different things to
different folks. Jacob hit the nail on the head for WYSIWYG /GUI editors.
Inkscape and Illustrator push out a bit of gnarly pseudo-code that becomes a
bit of a problem for scripting with it later, so SVG-Edit is better at
Hi Doug,
There used to be a link on svg.org that talked about server configuration
issues (mime types and the like). The SVG Primer pointed to it. Then it went
away, so we found a place on Planet Svg that seemed to have even better
information and redirected the pointer to that. But now, sigh,
The following document (example1) is a candidate for an acid test perhaps? It
has an animated stop (using straight animation, rather than animateColor, on
named colors) applied to a mask applied to an image. (I'm assuming this is
legal by the spec since it works almost every where else,
I just can't remember. I seem to recall a DOM interface or function in SVG that
takes as input a character (i.e., a text string of length one) rendered in a
given font-family and returns the path coordinates of the outline of that
object. (something like w.toPath(ariel, 100) -- 0,0 50,100 100,0
this functionality exposed at some point in
the future so that web-based graphical editors (like SVG-edit) can convert SVG
text to paths...
Jeff
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, Bjoern Hoehrmann derhoe...@... wrote:
* ddailey wrote:
I just can't remember. I seem to recall a DOM
-developers] A pleasant surprise
--- Вс, 3.10.10, ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.net пишет:
От: ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.net
Тема: [svg-developers] A pleasant surprise
Кому: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Дата: Воскресенье, 3 октябрь 2010, 1:23
I was pleased to find that this
example [1
Hi I wonder if anyone has done any experimenting with IE9 and ASV. Certain
features[1] in ASV are still more advanced than any other browser, leaving
certain aspects of the SVG spec untestable among all these new-fangled
browsers. (I'm hoping to put Windows 7 on one of my machines at the
I was pleased to find that this example [1], of simulated cylindrical
rotation, from [2] is now working in these browsers:
IE/ASV
Opera (9.5 or newer)
FF (4.0 b)
Safari (5.02)
and Chrome (6.0)
At the time of its creation just 2.5 years (and 0.5 dimensions) ago it only
worked in two of these
-in-ie9-close-but-should-try-harde
- Original Message -
From: jeff_schiller
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, October 02, 2010 4:53 PM
Subject: [svg-developers] Re: IE9 and ASV
Hi David,
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey ddai...@... wrote
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, October 02, 2010 8:08 PM
Subject: [svg-developers] Re: IE9 and ASV
Hi David,
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey ddai...@... wrote:
And until Windows 7 is widely deployed, for the 60% of the world using IE
I've been running into what seems like the same sort of issue in trying to
put SVG content in Moodle pages. inline, object and iframe don't seem
to work and embed has some troubles as well (including lack of fallback).
I had forgotten about img, so will be interested in trying that.
cheers
Nice Chaals!
It would be fun if one could build all your gradient stops with one instance
and a single replicate tag [1,2], of course ;)
It might take a wee bit of an addendum to the spec (of course)!
regards
David
[1]
Charles McCathieNevile wrote:
It would be fun if one could build all your gradient stops with one
instance and a single replicate tag [1,2], of course ;)
Hmm. Maybe if I had the same animation, but started it at -1 -.8 -.6 etc
it would work. Dunno if I can use a stop though...
I
[1] http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/groupuse.svg
opera 10.62 : 237
Chrome 6.0 : 211
IE8/asv : 164
FF4.0b6 : 160
Safari 5.0.2 : 74
The above [1] represents a count (I did the counting as my 13 year old daughter
watched a timer) of the number of actual screen
Also take a look at
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/SVGOpen2010/Polygons/polygons10.svg
It is rather fun since it never does the same thing twice. Either Opera or
IE/ASV is needed as the animations in FF4 don't yet seem to handle the d
attribute in paths.
cheers
D
- Original
, but if anyone can think of
a better approach, I'd be very interested to know.
Thanks,
Jake
On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 6:40 PM, ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.net wrote:
Hi Jake,
I've played some with what I think is the same thing you've been trying
to do and haven't been completely satisfied
Hi Jake,
I've played some with what I think is the same thing you've been trying to do
and haven't been completely satisfied with my results.
Take a look at the first cluster of links at
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/SVGOpen2008/edges_of_plausibility.htm
In those I do something
Hi Bruce,
I'm sorry you missed it too since it was really interesting, energetic,
informative, and fun. You would have liked it and you were missed. I think that
the host, Paris Telecom (who did an extraordinary job by the way) and their
associates will be posting audio, video and links
Hi Damian,
I think, if I read your source code correctly, that you've found a more elegant
solution to this problem than I had.
Several years ago I posted a query here about how to do this without consuming
large amounts of RAM. Maybe you've done that but I'm not sure. Let me explain.
The
Running into various troubles [1,2] with feDisplacement for an upcoming
presentation, I tried to simplify down to bare bones:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/newstuff/gradientFilter1.svg
Interestingly FF4 and Safari do not seem to attempt the displacement, while
Chrome tries it
I don't know about using filters as a part of CSS like that (nor in which
browsers it would work), but take a look at
http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/IG/resources/svgprimer.html#filters
Specifically, both feColorMatrix and feComponentTransfer allow surgery on
ranges of colors. I can't right now
An svg document is included in an HTML document using object
Inside the HTML is a textarea (it has id=t, and I also tried name=t and
putting it inside a form with id and/or name f).
The SVG contains a script which attempt to scribble into the HTML text area
using
top.f.t.value=mystring
or
Hi Helder,
When you figure it out, please let me know (or better yet add it somewhere in
http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/IG/resources/svgprimer.html :)
I've just typically been lazy and drawn a rect width=100% height=100%
x=0% y=0% fill=none / and then measured it using getBBox, but that's
Interesting question. It seems so natural that I wondered if I hadn't missed a
flag in the definition of the clip-path attribute that might not do exactly
that, but if it is there I don't see it.
But your reason for not using a mask isn't clear. Last I checked, this example
works just fine in
I seem to recall that a year or so ago some of the folks from Sketsa (I think)
were talking about making an animation editor built into their tool.
I may be wrong, but I remember sharing some concepts with them about how to
change the projection of the 4D animation space-time into the UI
This link is really cool! Thanks for posting it! If anyone didn't get a chance
to look, please do!
David
- Original Message -
From: owlgems
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2008 11:42 AM
Subject: [svg-developers] Tubefy
Hi to all
First
Hi Helder,
Somehow this posting (which I tried to post several days ago) only showed up
this week -- curious. So now there are two threads on the same topic, sorry!
Yes, it does set up a circular reference. Robert Longson observed such last
week.
It seemed like it might provide an easy
Well, the filling of a region of contiguous pixels from one point, as with the
paint bucket in MacPaint and its descendents (including Photoshop), is more of
a bitmapped concept than a vector graphics concept. One does not really have
access to pixels in SVG (though there are certainly times at
help how shoud i
reduce time.
thanks and regards
P.Chandra Shaker Reddy
From: ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.net
To: svg-developers@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2008 5:30:37 PM
Subject: Re: [svg-developers] Please can any one
Apologies if this message appears here more than once -- I have had some
trouble with some of my postings to this group recently
-
I saw Frank's suggestion (below) and thought yes of course! How
straightforward.
So I thought I'd check it out to make sure it worked the way we'd
Hi Andrew
a_matseevsky wrote:
It is not the first time when I'm trying to explain: there is no way
to create perfect raster to vector converter (conversion from JPG to
SVG is in fact this op) without advanced gradient fills support.
Linear, radial and meshes-based methods are too primitive.
Kenneth Nellis wrote:
In my experiment, I removed ASV and then relaunched Safari to see
what worked. SMIL didn't. I reinstalled ASV and SMIL worked again.
So, I conclude that Safari doesn't do SMIL. Or is something else
going on
That is true. Safari does not yet support SMIL. It seems to be on
:25 AM
Subject: Re : [svg-developers] Stroke width inside the shape
That's exactly what I'm trying to do (a map with adjacent regions)...
Thanks for the hint, I'm going to look at the superPath.
Julie
De : ddailey ddai...@zoominternet.net
À : svg
The only way that I can think of would be to create an identical object that
would be centered at the same locus, but a wee bit bigger (like scaled by
1+strokewidth/object'sDiameter) and have this object filled with none. That
object could then be used to mask the original object keeping the
I'm able to get the shapes overlaid on top of the image to respond (by turning
pink and displaying text) to mouseclicks just fine in Safari 3.2 for windows.
The floor buttons seem to change the visible floor plan as well.
It seems to have the same behavior in Opera, FF and IE/ASV so am not
http://www.tgdaily.com/content/view/40472/140/
excerpts from the article:
Opera 10 alpha unveiled: Fully web compliant, 30% faster
Also new: Opacity modifications through RGB and HSLA for setting the opacity
of any web page element, the selectors API, and improvements in scalable vector
W3C's announcement: http://www.w3.org/2008/12/smil3-pressrelease.html
Press coverage:
Wall Street Journal:
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/SMIL-30-Advances-Standard-Synchronized/story.aspx?guid=%7BA0336409-96B2-4286-A68F-F8B23C040BA3%7D
and also
http://in.sys-con.com/node/764284
Hi Julie,
I think what is happening when you put an alert in the middle of it all is this:
first the onmousedown is received, evt.type is then mousedown
next an alert fires
then to get rid of the alert the user has to move the mouse off of the group
(which received the mousedown)
so the click
I was nervous about two things in your example, and unfortunately only had a
chance to change both, but in ways that seemed to make things work in Opera,
FF, Safari and IE/ASV:
1. I got rid of the HTML altogether -- so that the appendChild statements were
going directly into the root of the
I'm not sure if I follow, so let's start with an example:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/carveholes.svg
In this, clicking in the blue rectangle cuts holes in it so we can see what is
behind.
What doesn't happen here is that the holes do not then block the addition of
new holes (in
Hi Steve,
Looking at the picture you've provided suggests to me the following approach:
a) generate a Voronoi diagram [1] (I think this can be done quickly, i.e. in
less than O(n^2) ) on a random set of n points; though I've never actually done
it -- maybe somebody knows of a link to an SVG
Well take a look at
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/newstuff/coords.svg
This is linear by linear generated with JavaScript. To make it log by linear,
I'd probably just decide on a set of points:
[.01,.1, 1, 10, 100, 1000, 1] that would represent the range, then generate
the
.
Regards
Frank
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've seen that some folks who pay attention to this list, also
happen to be relatively comfortable with the math of Bezier curves.
Suppose we have a path, P (involving a cubic Bezier : d=M x y
--- In svg-developers@yahoogroups.com, ddailey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I will hope Frank finds the time to do the things he's talking
about -- they all sound quite worthwhile.
I, on the other hand, have been playing a bit more:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg
I will hope Frank finds the time to do the things he's talking about -- they
all sound quite worthwhile.
I, on the other hand, have been playing a bit more:
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/svg/followpath6.svg
You'll need SMIL support and JavaScript in your SVG to see it, but it's only
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