Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Gradient filled rectangles, why is the border thinner #297

Open
yangxun521 opened this issue Jul 14, 2024 · 2 comments
Open

Gradient filled rectangles, why is the border thinner #297

yangxun521 opened this issue Jul 14, 2024 · 2 comments

Comments

@yangxun521
Copy link

Describe the bug
A clear and concise description of what the bug is.

To Reproduce
See this playground.

Expected behavior
I would have expected the PDF to look like so.
This is in accordance to the following SVG spec.

Desktop (please complete the following information):

  • OS: [e.g. iOS]
  • Browser [e.g. chrome, safari]
  • Version [e.g. 22]

Smartphone (please complete the following information):

  • Device: [e.g. iPhone6]
  • OS: [e.g. iOS8.1]
  • Browser [e.g. stock browser, safari]
  • Version [e.g. 22]

Additional context
Add any other context about the problem here.

@yGuy
Copy link
Member

yGuy commented Jul 15, 2024

Here is a stripped down version of the SVG:

<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 100 100">
  <linearGradient id="fill">
    <stop offset="0" style="stop-color:#777;stop-opacity:0.5"></stop>
    <stop offset="1" style="stop-color:#777;stop-opacity:0.5"></stop>
  </linearGradient>
  <rect style="stroke: red; stroke-width: 10; fill: url(#fill);" x="25" y="25" width="50" height="50"></rect>
</svg>

PlayGround

It seems that for gradients (only for gradients) the fill is rendered up to the center of the stroke, covering half of the stroke, as you can see with opacity enabled. This doesn't happen with regular fills.

This can be reproduced in Chrome/Edge Version 126.0.2592.102 (Official build) (64-bit) on Windows 11

image

I can't tell whether this is an issue with jspdf or svg2pdf at this point.

PS: thanks for the report, but next time, please at least delete all of the template parts that you have not filled out.

@HackbrettXXX
Copy link
Member

It looks like the fill and stroke are applied in the wrong order:

% rect path:
25. 25. m
75. 25. l
75. 75. l
25. 75. l
h
q
W S % sets the path as the current clip path and strokes it
/GS1 gs
50. 0. 0. 50. 25. 25. cm
/Sh1 sh % renders the gradient clipped by the clip path

This should be fixed in jspdf. I'm not sure if there is an elegant solution to this without having to duplicate the shape path.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

3 participants