The sample raster images look great! Right now, due to how Go statically links code I can't use GPL code in just about anything I use Go for.
I totally respect your license decision, but, it may be a poorer fit for Go... On Sunday, April 22, 2018 at 10:41:07 AM UTC-7, Steven Wiley wrote: > > Hi all, > > I needed to write an SVG renderer; something that draws an SVG file onto > an image (not to be confused with an SVG generator such as SVGo). I wanted > to do this in native go, and not rely on wrapping pre-existing C code. > > The golang 2D drawing packages I could find were not capable of rendering > stroked paths with joins like 'arc' or 'miter-clip', or specifying between > ending a stroked path as an open line or a closed loop. So, in order to > draw SVG 2.0 <https://www.w3.org/TR/SVG2/> compliant stroked and > dashed-stroked paths, I refactored and enhanced the raster package from > the golang translation of freetype, <https://github.com/golang/freetype>used > by many of the 2D packages, into a new package; rasterx > <https://github.com/srwiley/rasterx>. More information on the > refactorization is available in the readme. > > The SVG renderer, oksvg <https://github.com/srwiley/oksvg>, processes > only a basic sub-set of the SVG specification, but it is capable of > faithfully rendering many, probably most, but certainly not all, of the > free and commercial SVG icons available. I have been focusing on just the > basics the path functions, and many elements like defs, gradients, or > animations have not been added at this point. However, the full SVG 2.0 > path specification is implemented and even exceeded, since rasterx can > perform additional path functions that are not described by the SVG 2.0 > specification. Also, when an SVG file is parsed, oksvg can be set to > ignore, log, or error-out when reading an unrecognized SVG element. > > So now we can render a large set of SVG icons in native go! I hope some of > you find this useful. Please check it out and let me know what you think. > The image below demonstrates the effect of some of the available joining > and capping functions. > > Cheers! > > > [image: TestShapes.png] > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "golang-nuts" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to golang-nuts+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.