I've checked in another fix, which seems to work in Firefox as well as
Chrome. In fact the mime type is irrelevant when the content is being
generated by the DOM API.
Sam
On 08/03/2011 14:34, Sam Lindley wrote:
Hi Chifeng,
I've just checked in a fix to the trunk which will at least allow inline
SVG to work with Google Chrome providing you attach the appropriate
xmlns attribute to the SVG element. It should be easy to get it working
with Firefox as well (I'll do that shortly). For that we'll need to make
sure Links spits out an appropriate mime-type: application/xhtml+xml
should work, I believe.
Sam
On 25/02/2011 17:15, Chifeng Chou wrote:
Hi everyone, I'm doing an experiment to manipulate SVG in the browser
via Links.
There're a few ways to show SVG on HTML webpages, i.e. <object>,
<embed> and <iframe>. They all present SVG files as external sources
and do not allow <SVG> tags inside directly. Consequently, I can't
do much to the content of SVG.
However, inline SVG can live inside a valid XHTML document but I
failed to do so with Links. According to the link bellow, Links does
not support XHTML validation.
http://lists.inf.ed.ac.uk/pipermail/links-users/2010-February/000225.html
Is there any way to get around this?
Thanks for any suggestion,
Chifeng
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