Raphaël (JavaScript library) explained

Raphaël
Logo Size:64px
Developer:Dmitry Baranovskiy
Released:[1]
Latest Release Version:2.3.0
Latest Release Date:[2]
Programming Language:JavaScript

Raphaël, named for Italian painter Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino,[3] is a cross-browser JavaScript library that draws Vector graphics for web sites. It will use SVG for most browsers, but will use VML for older versions of Internet Explorer. Raphaël currently supports Chrome 5.0+ Firefox 3.0+, Safari 3.0+, Opera 9.5+ and Internet Explorer 6.0+.

Use

Raphaël is used by first creating an instance of the Raphaël object, which manages the creation of the canvas. The following examples create a canvas that is 320 pixels wide and 200 pixels high:

// top left of canvas at the viewport's 10,50 coordinatevar r = Raphael(10, 50, 320, 200);

// top left of canvas at the top left corner of the #example element (in elements where dir="ltr")var r = Raphael(document.getElementById("example"), 320, 200);

// same as abovevar r = Raphael("example", 320, 200);

Once the Raphaël object has been instantiated, its various drawing, resizing and animation methods may be called to build up a vector graphic. This library includes support of Cùfon fonts, a format that turns a given font into a set of vector paths. It is extensible through plugins.

Usage

The widget is used on the Washington Post and the Times Online websites.

Raphaël is also used by iCloud.com, and by Mass Relevance in the White House.[4]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Raphaël—JavaScript library .
  2. Web site: Releases · DmitryBaranovskiy/raphael . . 2021-03-10.
  3. Web site: An Intro to Raphaël.
  4. https://twitter.com/RaphaelJS/status/88762625986531329 Raphaël in White House: “we (@massrelevance) used @raphaeljs 2.0 for the map viz used during the #AskObama event today http://t.co/EcqROIi”