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Free and open-source software portal; This is a category of articles relating to graphics software which can be freely used, copied, studied, modified, and redistributed by everyone that obtains a copy: "free software" or "open source software".
GIMP, which works mainly with raster images, offers a limited set of features to create and record SVG files. It can also load and handle SVG files created with other software like Inkscape. Inkscape is a free and open-source vector editor with the primary native format being SVG. Inkscape is available for Linux, Windows, Mac OS X, and other ...
Boxy SVG is a proprietary vector graphics editor for creating illustrations, as well as logos, icons, and other elements of graphic design. It is primarily focused on editing drawings in the SVG file format. The program is available as both a web app and a desktop application for Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, and Linux-based operating systems.
SVG-edit is a cross-browser web-based, JavaScript-driven web tool, and has also been made into browser addons, such as an addon for Firefox, a Chrome extension, and a standalone widget for Opera. [1] There's also an experimental SVG editing extension on MediaWiki that uses SVG-edit. [2]
Sodipodi started a collection of SVG clip art containing symbols and flags from around the world. [8] This work helped inspire the Open Clip Art Library. [9]In 2003 a group of Sodipodi developers decided to improve Sodipodi with different goals, including redesigning the interface and closer compliance with the SVG standard. [10]
Userboxes for users who are vector graphics editors or want to be: {} : interested by Vectorial/SVG format. Looking for software, protocols, files, etc. {} : starting to use vector editors, making SVG basic file. {} : make pretty .svg picture. {} or {} : make amazing .svg picture.
VRR (a Vector-based gRaphic editoR) is a free and open-source vector graphics editor application designed especially for creating illustrations of mathematical articles. VRR has a simple but powerful operation set: creating, manipulating and transforming basic graphic primitives, which are points, segments, rational Bézier curves, elliptic ...
A small team led by Igor Novikov started the project in 2003, based on the existing open source vector graphics editor Skencil. sK1 is a fork of the Skencil 0.6.x series which used Tk widgets for the user interface (this version had been dropped by the main Skencil developers who were working on a branch of the program based on GTK+).