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I need to pick one of two technologies (svg, canvas) for an ongoing project of mine. I would prefer to pick the technology that is more maintained and in active development rather then choose a technology marked for "putting down".

Which of the two should I choose?

Is there a good JS library built on top of them?

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What kinds of things are you doing with it? Creating interactive and/or scalable objects, or just drawing static charts and stuff? – Kev Mar 10 '09 at 20:02
Imagine a huge GO board, with many kinds of units and many users. All on-line and requires only the browser. – Itay Moav Sep 22 at 20:59

9 Answers

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I would personally recommend for you to choose Canvas. You are always able to get cross-browser support with exCanvas. SVG is a fine technology but in terms of who has the hot hand, Canvas is currently getting a lot of momentum building up with the HTML5 adoption underway in several A-grade, modern web browsers.

Another thing you may want to consider are the types of operations you will be doing with your technology of choice. VML and SVG are both vector-based, while canvas is a bitmapped system. This can translate differently in terms of scaling and performance.

Here are some articles comparing SVG and canvas drawing:

http://www.ernestdelgado.com/gmaps/canvas/ddemo1.html
http://www.borismus.com/canvas-vs-svg-performance/

All in all in just depends on what you are comfortable with and how you are using SVG or canvas. You're able to achieve the same types of operations with either technology, but at this point there are so many exciting things happening with canvas it's hard to ignore: https://bespin.mozilla.com/

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The Raphael JavaScript framework John mentioned is the best I've come across. You could also use pure SVG and display it in IE using XSLT, as described by Sam Ruby. I've also used excanvas, which used to work with IE also. SitePont also had a post recently about the Lively Kernel, which uses SVG and JavaScript. Very cool, and I'm curious to see how that develops.

I prefer the SVG markup and tools (Illustrator, Inkscape, etc), as well as the ability to use the markup over the JavaScript code. Theoretically, you could use SVG with XForms or XHTML to create entire UI's, much like MXML or Silverlight's XAML, or even use XSLT to translate between different platforms. HTML5, while the likely successor to HTML4, is still not a full standard and no one knows for sure whether or not IE will ever have the canvas element.

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Lively Kernel looks great :) I wasn't able to use it though, it made firefox freeze. – the_drow Aug 11 at 8:59
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I've had good experiences with the Raphael JS framework, which uses SVG. I can't really comment on canvas, I'm afraid.

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AFAIK, SVG has nothing to do with the (X)HTML standards, while <canvas> is included in the HTML5 specification draft. So, canvas might be more future proof.

As a curiosity, check out what Mozilla Labs did with canvas; Bespin.

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tnx, I am familiar with Bespin. – Itay Moav Feb 21 '09 at 23:21
SVG is a W3C standard too. – PhiLho Feb 21 '09 at 23:45
SVG is a W3C standard-yes. But it's a separate standard from any HTML dialect. There's no <SVG>-tag (or equiv). – Henrik Paul Feb 21 '09 at 23:51
Yes there is. w3.org/TR/XHTMLplusMathMLplusSVG – Ant P Feb 22 '09 at 0:07
Technically, Henrik is correct. However, you can embed additional markup types in XHTML (e.g. SVG, XForms, etc). – Ryan Riley Feb 23 '09 at 19:29
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One cool thing about SVG is you can use inline SVG. That is you can treat SVG elements as if they are XHTML elements and be able to manipulate them with JavaScript and CSS.

They are supported by

  • Firefox
  • Opera
  • Camino
  • (Chrome)

And it seems that you can make it work even with IE according to Sam Ruby web site mentioned above. (I'm a new user and post a maximum of one hyperlink.)

Note: One problem I had in the past with <canvas> element was to render text. (I used canvas in 2008.) Firefox added this capability, and it'll be added to HTML5. So, it'll be irrelevant in a future, but you may want to check if your target web browsers support this.

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Great Link. Very Helpful. Thanks :) – Crimson Nov 30 at 4:34
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Those two are both going to be supported, because they have different purposes.

<canvas> is meant as a replacement for Flash and the like, to let you create rich applications.

SVG instead is another image format, which should be used like an image and have only basic interaction and movements.

So it really depends on what you want to accomplish. It's not hard to think of cases where both are used alongside in a website. (SVG for the logo / a picture gallery and <canvas> for a fancy voting element / game.)

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Why did someone downvote? Please leave a comment when you downvote. – the_drow Aug 11 at 8:56
I didn't downvote, but I'd have said the opposite: SVG is easier to make interactive since you can deal with elements and easily handle events, while Canvas is just a bitmap, much more like an image. – MSpreij Oct 18 at 13:46
@MSPreij: You are right, it's easier to implement basic interactive elements in SVG, but don't try anything complex for which it's easier to use a canvas element. If you haven't seen it yet, watch this introduction to canvas and svg: youtube.com/watch?v=siOHh0uzcuY&hl=de – Georg Oct 18 at 17:49
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Wow - lots of interesting opinions on here. Especially the ones that flat-out recommend a technology without knowing what the use will be.

I suggest you read this: http://ajaxian.com/archives/todataurl-canvas-and-svg

SVG and Canvas both have uses on the web and it depends on what your application needs. Both are limited in the sense that you need a shim to run in IE8-. Let's see what IE9 has.

If you have need of a DOM, handling mouse events, serialization - then SVG might be the best choice.

If you don't need this, but need a fast way to render pixels - then Canvas might be the best choice.

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My guess is both svg and canvas will stay since vector and raster graphics have their own niches. Also svg allows easier way to handle events, since elements are part of svg dom.

These articles I found on the web do a good job comparing svg and canvas

http://people.mozilla.com/~vladimir/xtech2006/

http://www.svgopen.org/2009/papers/54-SVG_vs_Canvas_on_Trivial_Drawing_Application/

and the last one shows a method to combine the two.

also it might be iteresting to see who sponsored 2009 SVG conference: http://www.svgopen.org/2009/

I think the map rendering test cited by @Robostu is rather limited since it does not involve event handling where for example a single polygon would need to be moved.

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you've ruled out Flex/Flash (and Silverlight) ? These may be better choices depending on your target and time frame.

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