svgmanip
is a library that helps import and composite together existing SVG files. It supports a superset of the features supported by svgutils
. For example, you can easily rotate and scale SVGs on the fly. In Warfrogs, this code:
from svgmanip import Element
output = Element(384, 356) # size of the output file.
fate = Element('assets/fate.svg').rotate(-15)
skip = Element('assets/skip.svg').rotate(-5)
attack = Element('assets/attack.svg').rotate(5)
output.placeat(fate, 0.73, 23.55)
output.placeat(skip, 107.81, 8.76)
output.placeat(attack, 170.9, 0.08)
output.dump('output.svg')
output.save_as_png('output.png', 1024)
Generates this image:
(The cropped edges are because of the output dimensions, which are customizable.)
Unlike svgutils (which this module is based on), .rotate()
rotates about the center of the graphic, instead of the top left corner. This produces results the user would expect.
Did you notice that you didn't need to specify the dimensions of an imported image? That's because svgmanip
detects it automatically behind the scenes!
.dumps()
grabs the full, real SVG code, not just the root element like .tostr()
in svgutils
.
npm install -g svgexport # if you want to be able to export to PNG
pip install svgmanip
.rotate()
additionally supports passing optional x
and y
coordinates.
Since the Element
class inherits from the Figure
class in svgutils
, it also supports these svgutils
methods:
.scale(factor)
- scale the SVG by a particular factor.find_id(element_id)
- find the inner SVG element with the given id. This method is guranteed to return anElement
object fromsvgmanip
..find_ids(element_ids)
- find the inner SVG elements with the given ids. This returns a Panel object fromsvgutils
.
svgmanip
also supports these methods in addition to the ones listed in the example:
.dumps
- dump to a string.loads
- load from a string.load
- load from a file (note: using the default constructor is reccomended in this context).to_png
- returns the generated PNG as a string
Apache 2.0. Example image of the Warfrogs cards is licensed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.