Christian
Christian

Reputation: 19740

SVG Linear gradient doesn't work in Safari

I've got an SVG object that contains a linear gradient embedded directly in a document. It works fine in Chrome and Firefox, but in Safari nothing is rendered. If I create the SVG as a file and embed it using the Object tag, it works fine in Safari. Other shapes and fills work, it's just linear gradient that doesn't work. I guess I could use the object, but I'd prefer to embed the SVG directly.

I've create a demo here (works in Chrome, not Safari): http://jsfiddle.net/sjKbN/

I came across this answer which suggests setting the content type to application/xhtml+xml, but this in itself seems to cause other problems.

Just wondering if anyone had come across any other fixes or ideas to get this working.

Upvotes: 17

Views: 22529

Answers (5)

daxtersky
daxtersky

Reputation: 406

The answer is simple, all id's (not only <linear gradient>) need to be UNIQUE for all SVG files.

Upvotes: 1

select
select

Reputation: 2618

I had some troubles too making an inline SVG with a linear gradient work. The designer had put a - in the id of the <linearGradient. The solution was as simple as removing it.

<linearGradient id="linear-gradient">
...
<path fill="url(#linear-gradient)" d="..."/>

with

<linearGradient id="lineargradient">
...
<path fill="url(#lineargradient)" d="..."/>

Upvotes: 0

michelepatrassi
michelepatrassi

Reputation: 2076

The accepted answer was not the solution for me.

My problem was the presence of a <base href="/" /> tag in my index file. Simply removing it solved the problem for me.

If you cannot remove it, probably some workaround already exist: found this gist but I did not tested it.

Update

Simply removing the href broke the child routing of my angular app, the proper workaround is to prepend to the linearGradient id with the page relative location. I wrapped the logic in a method like this:

get svgFill(): string {
  return `url(${this.location.path()}#${this.gradientId}) white`;
}

Upvotes: 16

Sebastien
Sebastien

Reputation: 251

About Alpha : It seems that Safari (7 at this moment) does not cover SVG color alpha channel, use stop opacity attribute. it works fine!

<stop stop-color="rgba(x,y,z,0.5)"> //safari does not work
<stop stop-color="rgb(x,y,z)" stop-opacity="0.5"> //ok

Upvotes: 24

methodofaction
methodofaction

Reputation: 72385

Your gradient will work in Safari if you wrap a defs tag around it:

<svg version="1.1" id="Layer_1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px"
     width="300px" height="300px" viewBox="0 0 300 300" enable-background="new 0 0 300 300" xml:space="preserve">
 <defs>
<linearGradient id="SVGID_1_" gradientUnits="userSpaceOnUse" x1="5.6665" y1="149.5" x2="293.333" y2="149.5">
    <stop  offset="0" style="stop-color:#FFF33B"/>
    <stop  offset="0.0595" style="stop-color:#FFE029"/>
    <stop  offset="0.1303" style="stop-color:#FFD218"/>
    <stop  offset="0.2032" style="stop-color:#FEC90F"/>
    <stop  offset="0.2809" style="stop-color:#FDC70C"/>
    <stop  offset="0.6685" style="stop-color:#F3903F"/>
    <stop  offset="0.8876" style="stop-color:#ED683C"/>
    <stop  offset="1" style="stop-color:#E93E3A"/>
</linearGradient>
</defs>
<rect x="5.667" y="5.333" fill="url(#SVGID_1_)" width="287.667" height="288.333"/>
</svg>

​It seems that wrapping your references in defs is encouraged but not obligatory according to spec. So this is a bug in Safari.

Upvotes: 33

Related Questions