@parametric-svg/element
v1.3.4
Published
Parametric 2D graphics. As a custom element (aka Web Component).
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Parametric 2D graphics. As a custom HTML element.
<svg>
<rect parametric:width="2 * (a + 3)"/>
</svg>
<parametric-svg a="5"><svg>
<rect parametric:width="2 * (a + 3)"
width="16" />
</svg></parametric-svg>
<parametric-svg a="50"><svg>
<rect parametric:width="2 * (a + 3)"
width="106" />
</svg></parametric-svg>
Getting started
If you’re building your app with webpack or something:
$ npm install @parametric-svg/element
require('@parametric-svg/element');
Otherwise you can drop our <script>
from the fantastic wzrd.in CDN anywhere in your HTML document:
<script src="https://wzrd.in/standalone/@parametric-svg%2Felement@latest"></script>
If you’re going the <script>
way, remember to swap latest
with a concrete version number in production. You can also download the script from https://wzrd.in/standalone/@parametric-svg%2Felement@latest and serve it yourself.
If it still doesn’t work, have a look at our note about browser support.
Usage
Wrap an <svg>
with a <parametric-svg>
element – all parametric attributes within the <svg>
will be immediately resolved and updated.
See the example to get a general idea what a parametric SVG is. You can read up on the syntax in the spec.
You can define variables by setting attributes on the <parametric-svg>
element. Any time you update an attribute, your drawing will be updated. Lightening-fast!
Browser support
Any browser which supports ES5 and custom elements will do. You can make custom elements work in any browser using the great document-register-element polyfill.
API
Register the <parametric-svg>
element with custom settings
register(options: {
logger? : {warn: Function},
document? : Document,
HTMLElement? : Function,
}) => void
In most cases you’ll just import the main module and be fine with the
default settings (see getting started). But if you want
fine control, you can require('@parametric-svg/element/register')
. The
function you get back takes a single argument options
with the following
properties:
logger
– A custom logger. Default:window.console
.document
– A custom implementation ofdocument
– for headless tests or something. Default:window.document
HTMLElement
– A custom HTMLElement constructor. If you’re passing adocument
, you’ll probably want to pass this as well. Default:window.HTMLElement
.