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Scalable Inman Flash Replacement (sIFR) is an obsolete JavaScript and Adobe Flash dynamic web fonts implementation, enabling the replacement of text elements on HTML web pages with Flash equivalents. It is open-source and was initially developed by Mike Davidson and improved by Mark Wubben .
The SVG Working Group is a working group created by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to address the need for an alternative to the PostScript document format. The PostScript format was unable to create scalable fonts and objects without creating files which were inordinately larger than a file which used unscalable fonts and objects.
The SVG specification lets CSS apply to SVG documents in a similar manner to HTML documents, and the @ font-face rule can be applied to text in SVG documents. Opera added support for this in version 10, [24] and WebKit since version 325 also supports this method using SVG fonts only.
Chris Lilley (born 1959 in the UK) is a British computer scientist known for co-authoring the Portable Network Graphics (PNG) format, starting the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) format, and his work on HTML2, CSS2, and Web fonts.
To natively include and handle multimedia and graphical content, the new <video>, <audio> and <canvas> elements were added; expandable sections are natively implemented through <summary>...</summary> and <details>...</details> rather than depending on CSS or JavaScript; and support for scalable vector graphics (SVG) content and MathML for ...
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is an XML-based vector image format for defining two-dimensional graphics, having support for interactivity and animation. The SVG specification is an open standard developed by the World Wide Web Consortium since 1999. SVG images are defined in a vector graphics format and stored in XML text files.
It makes use of Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG), HTML5, and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) standards. It is the successor to the earlier Protovis framework. [2] Its development was noted in 2011, [3] as version 2.0.0 was released in August 2011. [4]
There is one exception: if your SVG uses an inline stylesheet (placed inside <style type="text/css">...</style> tags), that stylesheet may use CSS that is explicitly described in the CSS Level 1 spec even if it's not in the SVG 1.1 spec. --Red rose64 🌹 21:27, 8 December 2024 (UTC) Thank you, Redrose64.