I'm trying to edit an existing SVG and save it afterwards using Batik (I need different formats and DOM-Manipulation).
What I do:
- Adobe Illustrator Source File (CS 4.0) saved as SVG 1.0 with all Glyphs (two embedded Fonts)
- Loaded with Batik (using SAXSVGDocumentFactory, source below)
- DOM-Modifications (even without modifications the problem occurs)
- Saving using SVGTranscoder
After transcoding I get a new SVG-File, which is filled with XML, but is not able to render properly in Firefox or Illustrator.
In Firefox I get the message that the XML is not well formed e.g.,
<glyph horiz-adv-x="249" unicode=""/>
My Code:
///////////////
// Load Template File (with embedded Fonts)
///////////////
File file = new File(SVGFilePath);
FileInputStream svgInputStream = new FileInputStream(file);
////////////////////
// Load SVG into DOM-Tree
////////////////////
String parser = XMLResourceDescriptor.getXMLParserClassName();
SAXSVGDocumentFactory factory = new SAXSVGDocumentFactory(parser);
Document doc = factory.createDocument(parser, svgInputStream);
//...
///////////////////////
// Generate Output File
///////////////////////
String savepath = "test.svg";
byte[] fileData = transcodeToSVG(doc);
FileOutputStream fileSave = new FileOutputStream(savepath);
fileSave.write(fileData);
fileSave.close();
My Transcoding Code:
public byte[] transcodeToSVG(Document doc) throws TranscoderException {
try {
//Determine output type:
SVGTranscoder t = new SVGTranscoder();
//Set transcoder input/output
TranscoderInput input = new TranscoderInput(doc);
ByteArrayOutputStream bytestream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
OutputStreamWriter ostream = new OutputStreamWriter(bytestream);
TranscoderOutput output = new TranscoderOutput(ostream);
//Perform transcoding
t.transcode(input, output);
ostream.flush();
ostream.close();
return bytestream.toByteArray();
} catch (IOException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
unicode=""
. I don't know if it will appear in this comment. I tried to edit it back into the question, but that didn't work. Apparently the document contained the Unicode noncharacter U+FFFF.