For the record, Firefox has displayed native svg for some time now...as does Google Chrome... But then, they both comply with International Internet standards Simply open Firefox and either enter the file address in the URI window on top or drag the file from a folder and drop it on a blank Firefox page. Web pages that embed svg images will display them just like any other graphics format -- but unless you create your own, it will be hard to find one. Web designers have had to avoid the use of svg, given the curse of the installed Microsoft base.

That said, the svg standard is evolving, and unlike more mature graphics we haven't developed a good standards compliance test yet since the rendering of the last 4-5% of the proposed features has not settled down. The vast majority of the standard has been accepted -- by everyone but Microsoft, which is a real bummer for we web designers who want to make our web sites work for them as well. To date, they've only been helpful when it benefits their objectives. Their major objective now is to try to try to slow down their rapidly declining share of  browser users. At last count, all versions of IE accounted for less than 60% of browsers in use world-wide (and dropping every month), Firefox now accounts for 27% and is growing rapidly.

The sad truth is that it may take years for all the current IE browsers out there to be replaced with newer versions (even if they do miraculously start to comply with standards) -- or be replaced by one of the non-Microsoft standards-compliant browsers. Meanwhile, to reach the largest possible Internet audience, we have to kludge our sites to work around IE's shortcomings. I've recently given up trying to support IE6 users, since it is so out of compliance -- I'm hoping there really aren't that many of them left out there.

Jack
[Full disclosure notice: I donate time to Mozilla, developer of Firefox, including beta testing new versions that extend the existing svg rendering capabilities. I formerly worked with several W3C standards committees and still actively comment on the standards development process for a number of them.]


On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 12:28 PM, John Culleton <john@...2676...68...> wrote:
Just for fun I created an Inkscape file with an aqua square on it and
saved it as svg. Then I addressed the file name in my Firefox
browser. It showed it OK.

I have read that reading svg files was promised in IE 9 for Windows
users.  Any of you who have Windows 7 and/or IE 9 can you verify
that this is so? I want to create some web entities in svg but not if I
am shut off from all or almost all IE users.
--
John Culleton
"Create Book Covers with Scribus"
http://www.booklocker.com/books/4055.html

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Let Crystal Reports handle the reporting - Free Crystal Reports 2008 30-Day
trial. Simplify your report design, integration and deployment - and focus on
what you do best, core application coding. Discover what's new with
Crystal Reports now.  http://p.sf.net/sfu/bobj-july
_______________________________________________
Inkscape-user mailing list
Inkscape-user@...2249...sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/inkscape-user