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Rendering SVG polygons in Raphael Javascript library

As far as I know, there is currently no way to display SVG polygons in the Raphael Javascript library. I'm building an application that needs to read in SVGs and them display them in Raphael, however, many of these SVGs use polygons.

For example, I'm reading in an SVG with a polygon in this format:

<polygon points="260.5,627.75 259.563,628.313 258.625,628.563 258.25...

So, I'm wondering...is there a way to convert the polygon points into a path which I could draw in Raphael? I've seen a few applications using python and PHP, but so far I can't find anything that is strictly javascript.

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks

like image 537
Munzilla Avatar asked Mar 13 '12 18:03

Munzilla


3 Answers

See Paper.path. You can specify your own path. E.g. a red triangle:

paper.path('M 50 0 L 100 100 L 0 100 Z').attr('fill', 'red')

In response to your edit:

You should be able to take the points attribute, as a string, and replace all coordinates in the format x,y with L x,y -- that'll make a valid path for SVG. You might want a moveTo command initially though. So, this:

260.5,627.75 259.563,628.313 258.625,628.563

Would become:

M 260.5,627.75 L 259.563,628.313 L 258.625,628.563

Raphael seems to want integers, not decimals. So it would have to be:

M 260,627 L 259,628 L 258,628

To make this happen:

var polygonPoints = '260.5,627.75 259.563,628.313 258.625,628.563';
var convertedPath = polygonPoints.replace(/([0-9.]+),([0-9.]+)/g, function($0, x, y) {
    return 'L ' + Math.floor(x) + ',' + Math.floor(y) + ' ';
}).replace(/^L/, 'M'); // replace first L with M (moveTo)
like image 188
James Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 05:10

James


The simplest (and most compact) solution is probably something like this, since points in a polygon/polyline are always absolute:

polygon:

var pathstr = "M" + yourPolygonElm.getAttribute("points") + "Z";

polyline:

var pathstr = "M" + yourPolylineElm.getAttribute("points");

This is because "L" is not really needed in the path string (the "d" attribute). "M" means first an absolute moveto, and then all coordinates that follow are implicit absolute linetos (or if you start with "m" then you get relative linetos).

like image 45
Erik Dahlström Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 04:10

Erik Dahlström


you can use http://readysetraphael.com/ to convert the whole SVG file to a raphael object, it's easier!!

like image 35
Abdelali AHBIB Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 04:10

Abdelali AHBIB