This content originally appeared on Jake Archibald's blog and was authored by Jake Archibald's blog
One of the great things about SVG is you can use media queries to add responsiveness to images:
<svg width="100" height="100" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> <style> circle { fill: green; } @media (min-width: 100px) { circle { fill: blue; } } </style> <circle cx="50" cy="50" r="50"/> </svg>
But when should the circle be blue? The specs say min-width
should match on the width of the viewport, but…
Which viewport?
<img src="circle.svg" width="50" height="50" /> <img src="circle.svg" width="100" height="100" /> <iframe src="circle.svg" width="50" height="50"></iframe> <svg width="50" height="50"> …as above… </svg>
Which of the above would draw a (potentially clipped) blue circle in an HTML document? As in, which viewport should be used? Should it be:
- The CSS size of the host document
- The width/height/viewBox attributes on the
<svg>
- The width/height attributes on the
<img>
- The CSS layout size of the
<img>
Here's an demo of the above:
Most browsers say…
For <img>
, the SVG is scaled to fit the image element, and the viewport of the SVG is the CSS dimensions of the <img>
. So the first <img>
has a viewport width of 50, and the second has a viewport width of 100. This means the second <img>
picks up the "blue" media query, but the first does not.
For <iframe>
, the viewport of the SVG is the viewport of the iframed document. So in the above example, the viewport width is 50 CSS pixels because that's the width of the iframe.
For inline <svg>
, the SVG doesn't have its own viewport, it's part of the parent document. This means the <style>
is owned by the parent document - it isn't scoped to the SVG. This caught me out when I first used inline SVG, but it makes sense and is well defined in the spec.
But what does the fox say?
Firefox has other ideas. It behaves as above, except:
For <img>
, the viewport is the rendered size in device pixels, meaning the viewport changes depending on display density. The first image in the demo will appear green on 1x screens, but blue on 2x screens and above. This is a problem as some laptops and most phones have a pixel density greater than 1.
This feels like a bug, especially as Firefox doesn't apply the same logic to the iframe, but we have to cut Firefox some slack here as the spec doesn't really cover how SVG-in-<img>
should be scaled, let alone how media queries should be handled.
I've filed an issue with the spec, hopefully this can be cleared up.
But things get a lot more complicated when you start…
Drawing SVG to a canvas
You can also draw <img>
s to <canvas>
es:
canvas2dContext.drawImage(img, x, y, width, height);
But when should the circle be blue? There are a few more viewport choices this time. Should it be:
- The CSS size of the host window
- The width/height/viewBox attributes on the
<svg>
- The width/height attributes on the
<img>
- The CSS layout dimensions of the
<img>
- The pixel-data dimensions of the
<canvas>
- The CSS layout dimensions of the
<canvas>
- The width/height specified in
drawImage
- The width/height specified in
drawImage
, multiplied by whatever transform the 2d context has
Which would you expect? Again, the spec is unclear, and this time every browser has gone in a different direction. Give it a try:
As far as I can tell, here's what the browsers are doing:
Chrome
Chrome goes for the width/height attributes specified in the SVG document. This means if the SVG document says width="50"
, you'll get the media queries for a 50px wide viewport. If you wanted to draw it using the media queries for a 100px wide viewport, tough luck. No matter what size you draw it to the canvas, it'll draw using the media queries for a 50px width.
However, if the SVG specifies a viewBox
rather than a fixed width, Chrome uses the pixel-data width of the <canvas>
as the viewport width. You could argue this is similar to how things work with inline SVG, where the viewport is the whole window, but switching behaviours based on viewBox
is really odd.
Chrome wins the bizarro-pants award for "wonkiest behaviour".
Safari
Like Chrome, Safari uses the size specified in the SVG document, with the same downsides. But if the SVG uses a viewBox
rather than a fixed width, it calculates the width from the viewBox
, so an SVG with viewBox="50 50 200 200"
would have a width of 150.
So, less bizarre than Chrome, but still really restrictive.
Firefox
Firefox uses the width/height specified in the drawImage
call, multiplied by any context transforms. This means if you draw your SVG so it's 300 canvas pixels wide, it'll have a viewport width of 300px.
This kinda reflects their weird <img>
behaviour - it's based on pixels drawn. This means you'll get the same density inconsistencies if you multiply your canvas width and height by devicePixelRatio
(and scale back down with CSS), which you should do to avoid blurriness on high-density screens:
There's logic to what Firefox is doing, but it means your media queries are tied to pixels drawn.
Microsoft Edge
Edge uses the layout size of the <img>
to determine the viewport. If the <img>
doesn't have layout (display:none
or not in the document tree) then it falls back to the width/height attributes, if it doesn't have those it falls to the intrinsic dimensions of the <img>
.
This means you can draw the SVG at 1000x1000, but if the image is <img width="100">
, it'll have a viewport width of 100px.
In my opinion this is ideal. It means you can activate media queries for widths independent of the drawn width. It also feels consistent with responsive images. When you draw an <img srcset="…" sizes="…">
to a canvas, all browsers agree that the drawn image should be the resource currently selected by the <img>
.
Phew!
I've filed an issue with the spec to adopt Edge's behaviour, and proposed an addition to createImageBitmap
so the viewport can be specified in script. Hopefully we can get a little more consistency across browsers here!
For completeness, here's how I gathered the data, and here are the full results.
This content originally appeared on Jake Archibald's blog and was authored by Jake Archibald's blog
Jake Archibald's blog | Sciencx (2016-10-10T14:50:06+00:00) SVG & media queries. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2016/10/10/svg-media-queries/
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