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Raphaël, named for Italian painter Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino, [3] is a cross-browser JavaScript library that draws Vector graphics for web sites. It will use SVG for most browsers, but will use VML for older versions of Internet Explorer. Raphaël currently [as of?] supports Chrome 5.0+ Firefox 3.0+, Safari 3.0+, Opera 9.5+ and Internet ...
Dynamic HTML, or DHTML, is a term which was used by some browser vendors to describe the combination of HTML, style sheets and client-side scripts (JavaScript, VBScript, or any other supported scripts) that enabled the creation of interactive and animated documents.
SVG Version of X11 color names SVG1.1 named colors with sRGB hex/dec and HSL codes, at UHD (4K) resolution. Extended colors are the result of merging specifications from HTML 4.01, CSS 2.0, SVG 1.0 and CSS3 User Interfaces (CSS3 UI). [6] Several colors are defined by web browsers. A particular browser may not recognize all of these colors, but ...
The D3.js library uses pre-built functions to select elements, create SVG objects, style them, or add transitions, dynamic effects, or tooltips. These objects can also be styled using CSS. Large datasets can be bound to SVG objects using D3.js functions to generate text/graphic charts and diagrams.
Mobile support for SVG exists in various forms, with different devices and browsers supporting SVG Tiny 1.1 or 1.2. SVG can be produced using vector graphics editors and rendered into raster formats. In web-based applications, Inline SVG allows embedding SVG content within HTML documents. The SVG specification was updated to version 1.1 in 2011.
3 Graphical/visualization (canvas, SVG, or WebGL related) ... 5 Pure JavaScript/Ajax. 6 Template systems. 7 Unit testing. 8 Web-application related (MVC, MVVM) 9 Other.
SVG animation elements were developed in collaboration with the working group that published several versions of Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL). The SYMM Working Group (in collaboration with the SVG Working Group) developed the SMIL Animation specification, which represents a general-purpose XML animation feature set.
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]