55

I want to create inline SVG graphics using Javascript.

However, it seems like createElementNS function applies some normalization and transforms all tags to lowercase. That is fine for HTML but not for XML/SVG. The NS I used is http://www.w3.org/2000/svg.

In particular I have problems creating a element. As it will be appended as <textpath> and thus will not work.

I did some search but could not find a solution yet.

Does anybody know a solution?

document.createElementNS("http://www.w3.org/2000/svg","textPath");

results in

<textpath></textpath>
1

4 Answers 4

86

I hope, the following example will help you:

function CreateSVG() {
    var xmlns = "http://www.w3.org/2000/svg";
    var boxWidth = 300;
    var boxHeight = 300;

    var svgElem = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "svg");
    svgElem.setAttributeNS(null, "viewBox", "0 0 " + boxWidth + " " + boxHeight);
    svgElem.setAttributeNS(null, "width", boxWidth);
    svgElem.setAttributeNS(null, "height", boxHeight);
    svgElem.style.display = "block";

    var g = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "g");
    svgElem.appendChild(g);
    g.setAttributeNS(null, 'transform', 'matrix(1,0,0,-1,0,300)');

    // draw linear gradient
    var defs = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "defs");
    var grad = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "linearGradient");
    grad.setAttributeNS(null, "id", "gradient");
    grad.setAttributeNS(null, "x1", "0%");
    grad.setAttributeNS(null, "x2", "0%");
    grad.setAttributeNS(null, "y1", "100%");
    grad.setAttributeNS(null, "y2", "0%");
    var stopTop = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "stop");
    stopTop.setAttributeNS(null, "offset", "0%");
    stopTop.setAttributeNS(null, "stop-color", "#ff0000");
    grad.appendChild(stopTop);
    var stopBottom = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "stop");
    stopBottom.setAttributeNS(null, "offset", "100%");
    stopBottom.setAttributeNS(null, "stop-color", "#0000ff");
    grad.appendChild(stopBottom);
    defs.appendChild(grad);
    g.appendChild(defs);

    // draw borders
    var coords = "M 0, 0";
    coords += " l 0, 300";
    coords += " l 300, 0";
    coords += " l 0, -300";
    coords += " l -300, 0";

    var path = document.createElementNS(xmlns, "path");
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'stroke', "#000000");
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'stroke-width', 10);
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'stroke-linejoin', "round");
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'd', coords);
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'fill', "url(#gradient)");
    path.setAttributeNS(null, 'opacity', 1.0);
    g.appendChild(path);

    var svgContainer = document.getElementById("svgContainer");
    svgContainer.appendChild(svgElem);
}
#svgContainer {
  width: 400px;
  height: 400px;
  background-color: #a0a0a0;
}
<body onload="CreateSVG()">
    <div id="svgContainer"></div>
</body>

3
  • Thanks for your reply. Based on your answer and a text-to-path svg example: http://pmast.de/svg/textToPath.svg I created the following document: http://pmast.de/svg/textToPath.html Although the resulting source seems identical and the creation of the elements follows your example, my document is not working... Am I missing something?
    – pat
    Aug 25, 2010 at 11:56
  • Your example helped me get started with creating SVG elements from JS. Still had to read the W3.org spec document on Core DOM. Namespaces are rather confusing. Thanks for the tips.
    – CyberFonic
    Apr 28, 2012 at 5:24
  • 3
    Does this work for people? I just get a gray box without any SVG elements. (Firefox and Chrome alike)
    – schlingel
    Feb 18, 2015 at 14:58
17

Firstly, use createElementNS, as you are doing. createElement (without NS) automatically lowercases element names inside HTML documents, according to the Mozilla documentation.

Secondly, don't trust Google Chrome's "Inspect Element" feature here. It seems to display every element in lowercase, no matter what the actual nodeName is. Try this:

document.createElementNS("http://www.w3.org/2000/svg", "textPath").nodeName
// Output: "textPath"

document.createElement("textPath").nodeName
// Output: "TEXTPATH"

Your problem might be an unrelated issue. For example, this code works fine in Firefox, but breaks in Chrome (12.0.742.112):

function animateSVG() {
  var svgNS = "http://www.w3.org/2000/svg";
  var textElement = document.getElementById("TextElement");
  var amElement = document.createElementNS(svgNS, "animateMotion");
  console.log(textElement);
  console.log(amElement);
  console.log(amElement.nodeName);
  amElement.setAttribute("path", "M 0 0 L 100 100");
  amElement.setAttribute("dur", "5s");
  amElement.setAttribute("fill", "freeze");
  textElement.appendChild(amElement);
  //amElement.beginElement();
};
<body onload="animateSVG()">
  <svg width="100%" height="100%" version="1.1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
    <g transform="translate(100,100)">
      <text id="TextElement" x="0" y="0" style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:24">
        It's SVG!
        <!-- <animateMotion path="M 0 0 L 100 100" dur="5s" fill="freeze"/> -->
      </text>
    </g>
  </svg>
</body>

My issue probably has something to do with the broken handling of animateMotion in Chrome (Issue 13585).

Your issue might be the same, or it might be another issue, but make sure you're not being fooled by the element inspector.

1
  • 4
    your comment about chromes inspect element feature saved my day, thanks
    – ZPiDER
    Oct 15, 2013 at 18:01
2

I have just resolved a similar problem. document.createElement (and I assume document.createElementNS), when called from a HTML page creates a HTML node (where case doesnt matter), not an xml node.

The following works in Chrome:

doc = document.implementation.createDocument(null, null, null); doc.createElementNS("http://www.w3.org/2000/svg","textPath");

you will get your mixed case node.

1
  • 1
    document.createElementNS() does not only create HTML elements. How does this answer have 5 upvotes??
    – zoran404
    Aug 12, 2018 at 5:25
-3

the answer given is too extensive and not really useful to me and i find it to much troublesome or to simply say bogus. If i were you, i would simple have on element in html with tag say:

<b id="myElement"></b>

and when i have to create element or add information i would simply do:

document.getElementById('myElement').innerHTML = 'your stuff here'; 

I Hope that was helpful.

3
  • 2
    This question is about SVG, not HTML.
    – gilly3
    Oct 22, 2012 at 0:16
  • 3
    @gilly3 he's got a point though -- the accepted answer involves building an SVG DOM element basically from scratch which, while neat to know how to do and technically the more correct answer, is not entirely practical. Since the SVG syntax in an SVG file is mostly identical to the SVG definition syntax in the DOM (from the '<svg' substring on), it is much more practical to take a container element like span or b and set its innerHTML attribute to the raw SVG data -- the browser takes care of the hard parsing and construction work for you that way. I'd say this is a valid 'quick-fix' answer
    – CCJ
    Jul 9, 2015 at 18:04
  • 3
    That's a pretty specific use case - to have the entire SVG drawing markup as a string, and append it as is to an HTML element. The question is specifically asking about adding an SVG element to an existing drawing. Now, today you can write the innerHTML of an SVG element in some browsers, but that functionality is new, and has only been available since earlier this year. The only way to add an element to an existing drawing in IE today, and in all browsers at the time this question was asked, is via createElementNS().
    – gilly3
    Jul 9, 2015 at 19:03

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