The goal is to have the <svg> element expand to the size of its parent container, in this case a <div>, no matter how big or small that container may be.

The code:

<style>
    svg, #container{
        height: 100%;
        width: 100%;
    }
</style>

<div id="container">
    <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" version="1.1" >
         <rect x="0" y="0" width="100" height="100" />
    </svg>
</div>

The most common solution to this problem seems to be setting the viewBox attribute on the <svg> element.

viewBox="0 0 widthOfContainer heightOfContainer"

However, this does not seem to work in cases where elements within the <svg> element have predefined widths and/or heights. For example, the <rect> element, in the above code, has its width and height explicitly set.

So the obvious solution is to use % widths and % heights on those elements as well. But does this even have to be done? Especially, since <img src=test.svg /> works fine and expands/contracts without any problems with explicitly set <rect> heights and widths.

If elements like <rect>, and other elements like it, have to have their widths and heights defined in percentages, is there a way in Inkscape to set it so that all elements with the <svg> document use percentage widths, heights, etc.. instead of fixed dimensions?

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1 Answer

The viewBox isn't the height of the container, it's the size of your drawing. Define your viewBox to be 100 units in width, then define your rect to be 10 units. After that, however large you scale the SVG, the rect will be 10% the width of the image.

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But the question is: How to scale the SVG? – Adrian Lang Jan 21 at 11:09
@AdrianLang The scaling happens automatically when you set a size on the SVG object, as is already done in the code in the question. Here's a fixed version of the example. – robertc Jan 21 at 13:55
You’re right, great, that actually works for me. I guess my problem was the height and width properties in my svg root element. – Adrian Lang Jan 21 at 19:16
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