Hi all,

I developed an SVG application for work a few years ago that added a 
slew of interactive options (drop down menus, links, auto-
highlighting of graphic elements, blinking, etc.) to schematics and 
diagrams in our technical manuals. Over the past few years I've seen 
support for SVGs dwindle, and am finding the SVG export capability of 
certain graphic tools (Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator, etc.) is also 
diminishing. It gets even worse when you consider that after I've 
added all the interactivity code to these drawings, I have few 
options to maintain them, since I need a native editor to do so 
(Sketsa, WebDraw?). When you reopen an SVG in Adobe or other tools, 
they resave it without the code I added. Additionally, the raw SVG 
code generated by the different tools is completely different, making 
consistency difficult.

It appears to me that using SVGs for technical applications might not 
be the best choice... Are there any other vector types that are 
overcoming these issues? Are there any robust SVG tools out there 
that can handle initial creation AND native editing well? 

Inquiring minds want to know...and I'd really appreciate any advice!

Thanks,

Jim Abbiati





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