I want to convert SVG into bitmap images (like JPEG, PNG, etc.) through JavaScript.
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What task is it that you actually want to accomplish? Even though echo-flows answer tell us that it is (in some browsers) possible there are better and easier conversion methods for almost all practical cases.– aaaaaaaaaaaaOct 20, 2010 at 10:54
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2Here's an example using d3: stackoverflow.com/a/23667012/439699– aceMay 14, 2014 at 23:50
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svgopen.org/2010/papers/62-From_SVG_to_Canvas_and_Back - Works perfectly! [On the link page, sourceSVG = $("#your_svg_elem_name").get(0) ]– Vijay SinghApr 24, 2016 at 17:41
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related: stackoverflow.com/questions/3173048/…– mathheadincloudsMay 30, 2020 at 19:08
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mybyways.com/blog/convert-svg-to-png-using-your-browser– natenhoApr 17, 2021 at 4:51
14 Answers
Here is how you can do it through JavaScript:
- Use the canvg JavaScript library to render the SVG image using Canvas: https://github.com/gabelerner/canvg
- Capture a data URI encoded as a JPG (or PNG) from the Canvas, according to these instructions: Capture HTML Canvas as gif/jpg/png/pdf?
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31This isn't strictly Javascript, but HTML5 as well. This will not work on IE8, or any other browser that does not support HTML5 Canvas.– JamesJun 25, 2012 at 18:31
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192Thanks for not supporting IE8. People should understand that it's time to move on. Jan 31, 2014 at 7:51
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11You can now use the JavaScript SVG library Pablo to achieve this (I made it). See the
toImage()
and alsodownload()
for an auto-downloaded image.– PremSep 15, 2014 at 14:04 -
2
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1@Premasagar Unfortunately the link doesn't work, but your comment sounds very interesting.– AndruMay 4, 2018 at 15:59
jbeard4 solution worked beautifully.
I'm using Raphael SketchPad to create an SVG. Link to the files in step 1.
For a Save button (id of svg is "editor", id of canvas is "canvas"):
$("#editor_save").click(function() {
// the canvg call that takes the svg xml and converts it to a canvas
canvg('canvas', $("#editor").html());
// the canvas calls to output a png
var canvas = document.getElementById("canvas");
var img = canvas.toDataURL("image/png");
// do what you want with the base64, write to screen, post to server, etc...
});
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1canvg need the second parameter to be
<svg>...</svg
but jquery html() function don't add svg tag, so this code works for me but I needed to edit the canvg live tocanvg('canvas', '<svg>'+$("#editor").html()+'</svg>');
– LuckynMay 20, 2015 at 9:05 -
1@Luckyn if you call
$(selector).html()
on the parent of your svg element, it will work Aug 12, 2016 at 18:31 -
1@Luckyn and @jonathanGB, you shouldn't have to use
html()
on wrappers, or manually construct the parentsvg
tag -- which might even have attributes you leave out with this hack. Just use$(svg_elem)[0].outerHTML
gives you the full source of the svg and its contents. Just saying...– JWLOct 19, 2016 at 12:53
This seems to work in most browsers:
function copyStylesInline(destinationNode, sourceNode) {
var containerElements = ["svg","g"];
for (var cd = 0; cd < destinationNode.childNodes.length; cd++) {
var child = destinationNode.childNodes[cd];
if (containerElements.indexOf(child.tagName) != -1) {
copyStylesInline(child, sourceNode.childNodes[cd]);
continue;
}
var style = sourceNode.childNodes[cd].currentStyle || window.getComputedStyle(sourceNode.childNodes[cd]);
if (style == "undefined" || style == null) continue;
for (var st = 0; st < style.length; st++){
child.style.setProperty(style[st], style.getPropertyValue(style[st]));
}
}
}
function triggerDownload (imgURI, fileName) {
var evt = new MouseEvent("click", {
view: window,
bubbles: false,
cancelable: true
});
var a = document.createElement("a");
a.setAttribute("download", fileName);
a.setAttribute("href", imgURI);
a.setAttribute("target", '_blank');
a.dispatchEvent(evt);
}
function downloadSvg(svg, fileName) {
var copy = svg.cloneNode(true);
copyStylesInline(copy, svg);
var canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
var bbox = svg.getBBox();
canvas.width = bbox.width;
canvas.height = bbox.height;
var ctx = canvas.getContext("2d");
ctx.clearRect(0, 0, bbox.width, bbox.height);
var data = (new XMLSerializer()).serializeToString(copy);
var DOMURL = window.URL || window.webkitURL || window;
var img = new Image();
var svgBlob = new Blob([data], {type: "image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8"});
var url = DOMURL.createObjectURL(svgBlob);
img.onload = function () {
ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
DOMURL.revokeObjectURL(url);
if (typeof navigator !== "undefined" && navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob)
{
var blob = canvas.msToBlob();
navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob(blob, fileName);
}
else {
var imgURI = canvas
.toDataURL("image/png")
.replace("image/png", "image/octet-stream");
triggerDownload(imgURI, fileName);
}
document.removeChild(canvas);
};
img.src = url;
}
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4This is not working in IE11, because of the security issue with
.msToBlob()
Jun 5, 2018 at 11:27 -
1Thanks!! I love how this works for both a "local" SVG HTML node and a remote SVG URL. Plus it doesn't require a full external library Nov 14, 2019 at 22:24
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5
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2This copyStylesInline helped me a lot!! Without adding that, my exported png was looking very weird. Thank you! Mar 11, 2022 at 20:01
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I have an issue with using SVGAnimateElement (since animations do not affect the style of the SVG), did someone else encounter it?– Kle0sJan 10 at 15:41
The solution to convert SVG to blob URL and blob URL to png image
const svg=`<svg version="1.1" baseProfile="full" width="300" height="200"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<rect width="100%" height="100%" fill="red" />
<circle cx="150" cy="100" r="80" fill="green" />
<text x="150" y="125" font-size="60" text-anchor="middle" fill="white">SVG</text></svg>`
svgToPng(svg,(imgData)=>{
const pngImage = document.createElement('img');
document.body.appendChild(pngImage);
pngImage.src=imgData;
});
function svgToPng(svg, callback) {
const url = getSvgUrl(svg);
svgUrlToPng(url, (imgData) => {
callback(imgData);
URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
});
}
function getSvgUrl(svg) {
return URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([svg], { type: 'image/svg+xml' }));
}
function svgUrlToPng(svgUrl, callback) {
const svgImage = document.createElement('img');
// imgPreview.style.position = 'absolute';
// imgPreview.style.top = '-9999px';
document.body.appendChild(svgImage);
svgImage.onload = function () {
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
canvas.width = svgImage.clientWidth;
canvas.height = svgImage.clientHeight;
const canvasCtx = canvas.getContext('2d');
canvasCtx.drawImage(svgImage, 0, 0);
const imgData = canvas.toDataURL('image/png');
callback(imgData);
// document.body.removeChild(imgPreview);
};
svgImage.src = svgUrl;
}
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This solution does not work for complex SVG (e.g. patterns with images)– DjovNov 23, 2020 at 14:14
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1Here is your code but optimized, but thank you for that... codepen.io/arcaelas-the-looper/pen/wvrqzvm Dec 21, 2021 at 4:18
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1
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For some reason, when I used
URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([svg], { type: 'image/svg+xml' }))
, some SVGs got tainted (I suspect it has todo with that they have \<style\>s defined in them), but then I tried creating data urls from scratch like so:'data:image/svg+xml;utf-8,${svg.replace(/#/g, '%23').replace(/\n/g, '%0A')}';
, which worked flawlessly! You could also use base64 like this:'data:image/svg+xml;base64,${btoa(drawing)}';
. I am using electron– puaaaalNov 12, 2022 at 23:23
This is an old question, in 2022 we have ES6 and we don't need 3rd party libraries.
Here is a very basic way to convert svg
images into other formats.
The trick is to load the svg
element as an img
element, then use a canvas element to convert the image into the desired format. So, four steps are needed:
- Extract
svg
asxml
data string. - Load the
xml
data string into aimg
element - Convert the
img
element to adataURL
using acanvas
element - Load the converted
dataURL
into a newimg
element
Step 1
Extracting a svg
as xml
data string is simple, we don't need to convert it as a base64 string. We just serialize it as XML then we encode the string as a URI:
// Data header for a svg image:
const dataHeader = 'data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8'
// Serialize it as xml string:
const serializeAsXML = $e => (new XMLSerializer()).serializeToString($e)
// Encode URI data as UTF8 data:
const encodeAsUTF8 = s => `${dataHeader},${encodeURIComponent(s)}`
// Select the element:
const $svg = document.getElementById('svg-container').querySelector('svg')
// Encode it as a data string:
const svgData = encodeAsUTF8(serializeAsXML($svg))
Note:
If you need a base64 data you can use this option:
...
// Encode URI data as base64 data:
const encodeAsB64 = s => `${dataHeader};base64,${btoa(s)}`
...
// Encode it as a data string:
const svgData = encodeAsB64(serializeAsXML($svg))
Step 2
Loading the xml
data string into a img
element:
// This function returns a Promise whenever the $img is loaded
const loadImage = async url => {
const $img = document.createElement('img')
$img.src = url
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
$img.onload = () => resolve($img)
$img.onerror = reject
$img.src = url
})
}
Step 3
Converting the img
element to a dataURL
using a canvas
element:
const $canvas = document.createElement('canvas')
$canvas.width = $svg.clientWidth
$canvas.height = $svg.clientHeight
$canvas.getContext('2d').drawImage(img, 0, 0, $svg.clientWidth, $svg.clientHeight)
return $canvas.toDataURL(`image/${format}`, 1.0)
Step 4
Loading the converted dataURL
into a new img
element:
const $img = document.createElement('img')
$img.src = dataURL
$holder.appendChild($img)
Here you have a working snippet:
const dataHeader = 'data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8'
const $svg = document.getElementById('svg-container').querySelector('svg')
const $holder = document.getElementById('img-container')
const $label = document.getElementById('img-format')
const destroyChildren = $element => {
while ($element.firstChild) {
const $lastChild = $element.lastChild ?? false
if ($lastChild) $element.removeChild($lastChild)
}
}
const loadImage = async url => {
const $img = document.createElement('img')
$img.src = url
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
$img.onload = () => resolve($img)
$img.onerror = reject
})
}
const serializeAsXML = $e => (new XMLSerializer()).serializeToString($e)
const encodeAsUTF8 = s => `${dataHeader},${encodeURIComponent(s)}`
const encodeAsB64 = s => `${dataHeader};base64,${btoa(s)}`
const convertSVGtoImg = async e => {
const $btn = e.target
const format = $btn.dataset.format ?? 'png'
$label.textContent = format
destroyChildren($holder)
const svgData = encodeAsUTF8(serializeAsXML($svg))
const img = await loadImage(svgData)
const $canvas = document.createElement('canvas')
$canvas.width = $svg.clientWidth
$canvas.height = $svg.clientHeight
$canvas.getContext('2d').drawImage(img, 0, 0, $svg.clientWidth, $svg.clientHeight)
const dataURL = await $canvas.toDataURL(`image/${format}`, 1.0)
console.log(dataURL)
const $img = document.createElement('img')
$img.src = dataURL
$holder.appendChild($img)
}
const buttons = [...document.querySelectorAll('[data-format]')]
for (const $btn of buttons) {
$btn.onclick = convertSVGtoImg
}
.wrapper {
display: flex;
flex-flow: row nowrap;
width: 100vw;
}
.images {
display: flex;
flex-flow: row nowrap;
width: 70%;
}
.image {
width: 50%;
display: flex;
flex-flow: row wrap;
justify-content: center;
}
.label {
width: 100%;
text-align: center;
}
<div class="wrapper">
<div class="item images">
<div class="image left">
<div class="label">svg</div>
<div id="svg-container">
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xml:space="preserve" width="200" height="200" viewBox="0 0 248 204">
<path fill="#1d9bf0" d="M221.95 51.29c.15 2.17.15 4.34.15 6.53 0 66.73-50.8 143.69-143.69 143.69v-.04c-27.44.04-54.31-7.82-77.41-22.64 3.99.48 8 .72 12.02.73 22.74.02 44.83-7.61 62.72-21.66-21.61-.41-40.56-14.5-47.18-35.07 7.57 1.46 15.37 1.16 22.8-.87-23.56-4.76-40.51-25.46-40.51-49.5v-.64c7.02 3.91 14.88 6.08 22.92 6.32C11.58 63.31 4.74 33.79 18.14 10.71c25.64 31.55 63.47 50.73 104.08 52.76-4.07-17.54 1.49-35.92 14.61-48.25 20.34-19.12 52.33-18.14 71.45 2.19 11.31-2.23 22.15-6.38 32.07-12.26-3.77 11.69-11.66 21.62-22.2 27.93 10.01-1.18 19.79-3.86 29-7.95-6.78 10.16-15.32 19.01-25.2 26.16z"/>
</svg>
</div>
</div>
<div class="image right">
<div id="img-format" class="label"></div>
<div id="img-container"></div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="item buttons">
<button id="btn-png" data-format="png">PNG</button>
<button id="btn-jpg" data-format="jpeg">JPG</button>
<button id="btn-webp" data-format="webp">WEBP</button>
</div>
</div>
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in step 2 you are setting the
img.src
twice, I believe the second one is sufficient– kartsimsDec 14, 2022 at 10:00 -
the image in the
step 2
still contains adata:image/svg+xml
image we use the canvas to convert it into anotherformat
(i.e. png, jpeg, ...) If in your case thestep 2
is enough great. I presented a complete solution for everybody.– TeocciDec 15, 2022 at 0:10
change svg
to match your element
function svg2img(){
var svg = document.querySelector('svg');
var xml = new XMLSerializer().serializeToString(svg);
var svg64 = btoa(xml); //for utf8: btoa(unescape(encodeURIComponent(xml)))
var b64start = 'data:image/svg+xml;base64,';
var image64 = b64start + svg64;
return image64;
};svg2img()
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2it's not working for me, i get this error:
Uncaught TypeError: Failed to execute 'serializeToString' on 'XMLSerializer': parameter 1 is not of type 'Node'.
– XsmaelDec 14, 2018 at 19:45 -
1@Xsmael try to Switch the DOMParser interface developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/DOMParser Dec 15, 2018 at 5:19
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1
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1@MTZ you should consider using utf8 part for utf8 characters for example your SVG contains non ASCI characters May 18, 2021 at 4:31
My use case was to have the svg data loaded from a network and this ES6 Class did the Job.
class SvgToPngConverter {
constructor() {
this._init = this._init.bind(this);
this._cleanUp = this._cleanUp.bind(this);
this.convertFromInput = this.convertFromInput.bind(this);
}
_init() {
this.canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
this.imgPreview = document.createElement("img");
this.imgPreview.style = "position: absolute; top: -9999px";
document.body.appendChild(this.imgPreview);
this.canvasCtx = this.canvas.getContext("2d");
}
_cleanUp() {
document.body.removeChild(this.imgPreview);
}
convertFromInput(input, callback) {
this._init();
let _this = this;
this.imgPreview.onload = function() {
const img = new Image();
_this.canvas.width = _this.imgPreview.clientWidth;
_this.canvas.height = _this.imgPreview.clientHeight;
img.crossOrigin = "anonymous";
img.src = _this.imgPreview.src;
img.onload = function() {
_this.canvasCtx.drawImage(img, 0, 0);
let imgData = _this.canvas.toDataURL("image/png");
if(typeof callback == "function"){
callback(imgData)
}
_this._cleanUp();
};
};
this.imgPreview.src = input;
}
}
Here is how you use it
let input = "https://restcountries.eu/data/afg.svg"
new SvgToPngConverter().convertFromInput(input, function(imgData){
// You now have your png data in base64 (imgData).
// Do what ever you wish with it here.
});
If you want a vanilla JavaScript version, you could head over to Babel website and transpile the code there.
Here a function that works without libraries and returns a Promise:
/**
* converts a base64 encoded data url SVG image to a PNG image
* @param originalBase64 data url of svg image
* @param width target width in pixel of PNG image
* @return {Promise<String>} resolves to png data url of the image
*/
function base64SvgToBase64Png (originalBase64, width) {
return new Promise(resolve => {
let img = document.createElement('img');
img.onload = function () {
document.body.appendChild(img);
let canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
let ratio = (img.clientWidth / img.clientHeight) || 1;
document.body.removeChild(img);
canvas.width = width;
canvas.height = width / ratio;
let ctx = canvas.getContext("2d");
ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0, canvas.width, canvas.height);
try {
let data = canvas.toDataURL('image/png');
resolve(data);
} catch (e) {
resolve(null);
}
};
img.onerror = function() {
resolve(null);
};
img.src = originalBase64;
});
}
On Firefox there is an issue for SVGs without set width / height.
See this working example including a fix for the Firefox issue.
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Thanks for testing, I didn't test with Safari before. So there is also no error in the Javascript console, which would be strange?– kluesFeb 5, 2021 at 8:46
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Yes, very odd in my experience, but I didn't have more time to waste on it unfortunately Feb 6, 2021 at 14:53
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1) I suggest attaching to img.onerror also to not risk stalling the Promise in that case. 2) you don't have to attach the image to the document.body. Jun 3, 2022 at 10:35
Svg
to png
can be converted depending on conditions:
- If
svg
is in format SVG (string) paths:
- create canvas
- create
new Path2D()
and setsvg
as parameter - draw path on canvas
- create image and use
canvas.toDataURL()
assrc
.
example:
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
let svgText = 'M10 10 h 80 v 80 h -80 Z';
let p = new Path2D('M10 10 h 80 v 80 h -80 Z');
ctx.stroke(p);
let url = canvas.toDataURL();
const img = new Image();
img.src = url;
Note that Path2D
not supported in ie
and partially supported in edge. Polyfill solves that:
https://github.com/nilzona/path2d-polyfill
- Create
svg
blob and draw on canvas using.drawImage()
:
- make canvas element
- make a svgBlob object from the svg xml
- make a url object from domUrl.createObjectURL(svgBlob);
- create an Image object and assign url to image src
- draw image into canvas
- get png data string from canvas: canvas.toDataURL();
Nice description: https://web.archive.org/web/20200125162931/http://ramblings.mcpher.com:80/Home/excelquirks/gassnips/svgtopng
Note that in ie you will get exception on stage of canvas.toDataURL(); It is because IE has too high security restriction and treats canvas as readonly after drawing image there. All other browsers restrict only if image is cross origin.
- Use
canvg
JavaScript library. It is separate library but has useful functions.
Like:
ctx.drawSvg(rawSvg);
var dataURL = canvas.toDataURL();
-
1
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1yes, indeed. I don't know how to reach there now. But description above can be enough for some understanding. Good idea for future co copy some context after the reference Jun 10, 2020 at 16:33
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fixed linkrot. the wayback machine is your friend for fixing linkrot.– albertSep 20, 2020 at 17:54
- get data URIs from SVG:
data:image/svg+xml;base64,${btoa(new XMLSerializer().serializeToString(svgElem))}
- prepare an Image
- create a canvas and use toDataURL to export.
Example
<!-- test data-->
<svg width="400" height="400"><g transform="translate(23.915343915343925,-80.03971756398937)" class="glyph" stroke="#000000" fill="#a0a0a0"><path d="M74.97 108.70L74.97 108.70L100.08 110.77Q93.89 147.91 87.35 179.89L87.35 179.89L148.23 179.89L148.23 194.34Q143.76 277.91 113.84 339.81L113.84 339.81Q144.44 363.54 163.70 382.46L163.70 382.46L146.51 402.75Q128.62 384.18 101.80 361.83L101.80 361.83Q75.32 405.85 34.39 436.80L34.39 436.80L17.20 415.82Q57.43 386.93 82.20 345.66L82.20 345.66Q57.78 326.40 27.86 304.39L27.86 304.39Q44.37 257.96 56.75 203.97L56.75 203.97L19.26 203.97L19.26 179.89L61.90 179.89Q69.47 145.16 74.97 108.70ZM93.20 323.99L93.20 323.99Q118.65 272.06 123.12 203.97L123.12 203.97L82.20 203.97Q69.47 260.03 55.71 297.17L55.71 297.17Q76.01 311.61 93.20 323.99ZM160.26 285.13L160.26 260.37L239.71 260.37L239.71 216.01Q268.25 191.24 294.05 155.48L294.05 155.48L170.58 155.48L170.58 130.71L322.94 130.71L322.94 155.48Q297.49 191.93 265.50 223.92L265.50 223.92L265.50 260.37L337.38 260.37L337.38 285.13L265.50 285.13L265.50 397.59Q265.50 431.64 237.65 431.64L237.65 431.64L187.09 431.64L180.21 407.57Q202.22 407.91 227.67 407.91L227.67 407.91Q239.71 407.91 239.71 390.03L239.71 390.03L239.71 285.13L160.26 285.13Z"></path></g></svg>
<button title="download">svg2png</button>
<script>
const output = {"name": "result.png", "width": 64, "height": 64}
document.querySelector("button").onclick = () => {
const svgElem = document.querySelector("svg")
// const uriData = `data:image/svg+xml;base64,${btoa(svgElem.outerHTML)}` // it may fail.
const uriData = `data:image/svg+xml;base64,${btoa(new XMLSerializer().serializeToString(svgElem))}`
const img = new Image()
img.src = uriData
img.onload = () => {
const canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
[canvas.width, canvas.height] = [output.width, output.height]
const ctx = canvas.getContext("2d")
ctx.drawImage(img, 0, 0, output.width, output.height)
// 👇 download
const a = document.createElement("a")
const quality = 1.0 // https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CanvasRenderingContext2D/imageSmoothingQuality
a.href = canvas.toDataURL("image/png", quality)
a.download = output.name
a.append(canvas)
a.click()
a.remove()
}
}
</script>
I recently discovered a couple of image tracing libraries for JavaScript that indeed are able to build an acceptable approximation to the bitmap, both size and quality. I'm developing this JavaScript library and CLI :
https://www.npmjs.com/package/svg-png-converter
Which provides unified API for all of them, supporting browser and node, non depending on DOM, and a Command line tool.
For converting logos/cartoon/like images it does excellent job. For photos / realism some tweaking is needed since the output size can grow a lot.
It has a playground although right now I'm working on a better one, easier to use, since more features has been added:
https://cancerberosgx.github.io/demos/svg-png-converter/playground/#
There are several ways to convert SVG to PNG using the Canvg library.
In my case, I needed to get the PNG blob from inline SVG.
The library documentation provides an example (see OffscreenCanvas example).
But this method does not work at the moment in Firefox. Yes, you can enable the gfx.offscreencanvas.enabled option in the settings. But will every user on the site do this? :)
However, there is another way that will work in Firefox too.
const el = document.getElementById("some-svg"); //this is our inline SVG
var canvas = document.createElement('canvas'); //create a canvas for the SVG render
canvas.width = el.clientWidth; //set canvas sizes
canvas.height = el.clientHeight;
const svg = new XMLSerializer().serializeToString(el); //convert SVG to string
//render SVG inside canvas
const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
const v = await Canvg.fromString(ctx, svg);
await v.render();
let canvasBlob = await new Promise(resolve => canvas.toBlob(resolve));
For the last line thanks to this answer
Here are my 2 cents. Somehow Download
anchor tag is not working as expected in code snippet, however it was working fine in Chrome
.
Here is working jsFiddle
const waitForImage = imgElem => new Promise(resolve => imgElem.complete ? resolve() : imgElem.onload = imgElem.onerror = resolve);
const svgToImgDownload = ext => {
if (!['png', 'jpg', 'webp'].includes(ext))
return;
const _svg = document.querySelector("#svg_container").querySelector('svg');
const xmlSerializer = new XMLSerializer();
let _svgStr = xmlSerializer.serializeToString(_svg);
const img = document.createElement('img');
img.src = 'data:image/svg+xml;base64,' + window.btoa(_svgStr);
waitForImage(img)
.then(_ => {
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas');
canvas.width = _svg.clientWidth;
canvas.height = _svg.clientHeight;
canvas.getContext('2d').drawImage(img, 0, 0, _svg.clientWidth, _svg.clientHeight);
return canvas.toDataURL('image/' + (ext == 'jpg' ? 'jpeg' : ext), 1.0);
})
.then(dataURL => {
console.log(dataURL);
document.querySelector("#img_download_btn").innerHTML = `<a href="${dataURL}" download="img.${ext}">Download</a>`;
})
.catch(console.error);
};
document.querySelector('#map2Png').addEventListener('click', _ => svgToImgDownload('png'));
document.querySelector('#map2Jpg').addEventListener('click', _ => svgToImgDownload('jpg'));
document.querySelector('#map2Webp').addEventListener('click', _ => svgToImgDownload('webp'));
<div id="svg_container" style="float: left; width: 50%">
<svg width="200" height="200" viewBox="-100 -100 200 200">
<circle cx="0" cy="20" r="70" fill="#D1495B" />
<circle cx="0" cy="-75" r="12" fill="none" stroke="#F79257" stroke-width="2" />
<rect x="-17.5" y="-65" width="35" height="20" fill="#F79257" />
</svg>
</div>
<div>
<button id="map2Png">PNG</button>
<button id="map2Jpg">JPG</button>
<button id="map2Webp">WEBP</button>
</div>
<div id="img_download_btn"></div>
-
if (!['jpg'].includes(ext)) return
andext == 'jpg' ? 'jpeg'
will never reach if someone uses jpeg, guessing you meant['png','jpg','jpeg','webp']
– Ol SenFeb 27 at 16:57
If the goal is to convert an SVG file to a PNG image file via a browser, maybe the following website can help for those who need it quickly :
https://mybyways.com/blog/convert-svg-to-png-using-your-browser
Enter the SVG code in this section, then click the Load SVG button
A preview of the SVG image will appear and can be downloaded or saved as a PNG image file by pressing the Save SVG as PNG button.