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Paperback Designing Svg Web Graphics Book

ISBN: 0735711666

ISBN13: 9780735711662

Designing Svg Web Graphics

Using a heavily illustrated, step-by-step style, Watt aims to ease designers into a more analytical, programming approach to graphics without losing the appeal of form and design. The change in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

absolutely fantastic book on SVG

The basics it has. It introduces you to the coding needed for a great start into designing SVG. A few header errors may frustrate in the beginnning, but with a little reading, they can be overcome.

Great Introduction - but not comprehensive

If you'd like to get a grasp of what SVG is all about and how it works and you find the SVG standard (600+ pages) to be rough going then I would highly recommend this book as a starter. It provides a good introductory overview of SVG and then systematically illustrates, using lots of basic examples, how much (but certainly not all) of it works. I'd consider this to be more of an illustrative exercise book to help someone get a running start using SVG. The book certainly isn't comprehensive, SVG is WAY too big and complicated to be completely explained and illustrated in a single volume. Nor are the examples in the book particularly long or sophisticated - however, once you learn the basics you can quickly start writing your own SVG scripts (or better comprehend existing SVG code or code generating libraries). The main problem now is that the downloadable Adobe SVG plugin (Windows/Mac)is really the only mostly complete standard SVG viewer available so it may be a while before SVG really catches on (not to leave out the Apache Batik project!).

An interesting blend of Graphics and Programming

There is one thing I love about this book is that it shows you the code step by step, and you can see the variations of the results and tune-ups one sample to another. I would still expect a little bit more in-depth discussion of SVG given the fact that the author has some programming background. One thing I really wish the book would do is to indent some XML code properly. Not all the step-by-step guides have changes highlighted that instantly makes sense. For perfections and lazy people like me, downloadable sources or a CD-ROM will make it easier to explore the samples.

SVG, unlike anything you have ever seen

Remember the first time you used "View Source" in your browser to learn from someone who knew something you did not? Because you learned well and fast, you made a living from HTML. The Web grew so explosively partly because we were all learning that way.Now imagine the same thing happening in Web graphics. A text-based graphics format, with source open for all to learn. SVG, as an application of XML, brings the potential of data-driven graphics to the Web. The graphic is the data and the data is the graphic, cutting out all middle layers.This is not a book about pretty pictures, although it is well illustrated. It is code-centric and by necessity focuses on SVG tags and attributes. The author expertly leads us in easy steps. The book is surprisingly easy to read. The author often changes tempo, removing us for a moment from the code and infusing a relaxed perspective, despite his obvious enthusiasm for this technology.The author assumes a basic understanding of XML syntax and some knowledge of applied cascading style sheets (CSS). XLink and XPointer are covered only to the extent necessary for linking in SVG, for instance. CSS, designed for XML applications as much as for HTML, is used from the very beginning, displaying once again the ability of CSS to multiply the power and flexibility of any tagging system it is joined to.The typography of the book, and the modest but effective use of color, contributes to the clarity of the exposition. The beginner should be aware that to follow along in the book, it is necessary to download freely available graphics tools and browser plug-ins almost 7 megabytes in total.SVG is a graphics format unlike anything you have ever seen. It has not yet taken center stage in Web development -- but it will. Will you be ready or will you be playing catch up?

A must have for your graphics library ...

I just got this book two days ago and I have not been able to put it down since. Mr. Watt does a fine job of decribing what SVG is and how it works. I have worked with Vector Markup Language (VML) over the last year and have been eager to dive into SVG ... this book has converted me for good. If you have experience with creating vector images with VML, you will have no problem breezing through the book. If you have not had a lot of experience, the book gives tons of examples that don't take much time to write the code and render on screen so you can see what the code does. If you are a graphic designer that uses Flash (or not), I highly suggest picking up this book. You will find that while you may want to continue creating large-scale projects in Flash, medium and small projects can be done with far less overhead file-wise with SVG. I hope that Mr. Watt has an Advanced SVG book in progress ... I should be done with this one by the end of the week!
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