123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536 |
- <?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?>
- <!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG April 1999//EN" "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/svg-19990412.dtd">
- <svg width="300px" height="3oopx">
- <desc>Transformation with establishment of a new viewport
- </desc>
- <!-- The following two text elements will both draw with a
- font height of 12 pixels -->
- <text style="font-size: 12">This prints 12 pixels high.</text>
- <text style="font-size: 12px">This prints 12 pixels high.</text>
- <!-- Now scale the coordinate system by 2. -->
- <g style="transform: scale(2)">
- <!-- The following text will actually draw 24 pixels high
- because each unit in the new coordinate system equals
- 2 units in the previous coordinate system. -->
- <text style="font-size: 12">This prints 24 pixels high.</text>
- <!-- The following text will actually still draw 12 pixels high
- because the CSS unit specifier has been provided. -->
- <text style="font-size: 12px">This prints 12 pixels high.</text>
- </g>
- <!-- This time, scale the coordinate system by 3. -->
- <g style="transform: scale(3)">
- <!-- Establish a new viewport and thus change the meaning of
- some CSS unit specifiers. -->
- <svg style="left:0; top:0; right:100; bottom:100" width="100%" height="100%">
- <!-- The following two text elements will both draw with a
- font height of 36 screen pixels. The first text element
- defines its height in user coordinates, which have been
- scaled by 3. The second text element defines its height
- in CSS px units, which have been redefined to be three times
- as big as screen pixels due the <svg> element establishing
- a new viewport. -->
- <text style="font-size: 12">This prints 36 pixels high.</text>
- <text style="font-size: 12px">This prints 36 pixels high.</text>
- </svg>
- </g>
- </svg>
|