Fixed stroke width in SVG

wxs picture wxs · Aug 19, 2009 · Viewed 45.6k times · Source

I would like to be able to set the stroke-width on an SVG element to be "pixel-aware", that is always be 1px wide regardless of the current scaling transformations applied. I am aware that this may well be impossible, since the whole point of SVG is to be pixel independent.

Context follows:

I have an SVG element with its viewBox and preserveAspectRatio attributes set. It looks something like this

<svg version="1.1" baseProfile="full"
    viewBox="-100 -100 200 200" preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid meet"
    xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" >
</svg>

This means that when I scale that element, the actual shapes inside it scale accordingly (so far so good).

As you can see, I have set up the viewBox so that the origin is in the center. I would like to draw an x- and a y-axis within that element, which I do thus:

<line x1="-1000" x2="1000" y1="0" y2="0" />

Again, this works fine. Ideally, though, this axis would always be only 1px wide. I have no interest in the axes getting fatter when i scale the parent svg element.

So am I screwed?

Answer

Erik Dahlstr&#246;m picture Erik Dahlström · Aug 20, 2009

You can use the vector-effect property set to non-scaling-stroke, see the docs. Another way is to use transform(ref).

That will work in browsers that support those parts from SVG Tiny 1.2, for example Opera 10. The fallback includes writing a small script to do the same, basically inverting the CTM and applying it on the elements that shouldn't scale.

If you want sharper lines you can also disable antialiasing (shape-rendering=optimizeSpeed or shape-rendering=crispEdges) and/or play with the positioning.