SVG Toolbar Icons - Gradients Missing
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Did you try to convert them to PDF?
Fredo uses PDF for vector icons.
Failing that you could try separating the fill and stroke...
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I'm in Windows, so I can only use SVG, no? My understanding is PDF is for OSX... am I wrong?
Anyway, I tried the file you sent, and it only showed the line-work. See the attached screenshot - it only showed the outline of the box.
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I've not tried gradient fills for icons. In WrapR we use flat colors so maybe it is not possible?
Did you examine the code of the Advanced Camera icons to see hoe they manage to use gradients?
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I opened the advance camera tools and sandbox tools SVG's by opening in Inkscape, and I can't for the life of me spot anything special about the gradient fills in, for instance, the smoove tool icon, or the add camera icon. The only thing I obviously see (in Inkscape, anyway) is that the gradient names are negative numbers in the stock SVG's. Looking at the code of the SVG, there are substantial style differences between what Inkscape generated and what the stock files have - how to fix this, I don't know. I'm not an expert on the SVG file format.
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Your best place to look is in the <svg>...</svg> tag code
Share an icon here and I can take a look. Inkscape and AI generate different SVG code on export.
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Share the SketchUp icon too.
Did you try using the SketchUp icon as your icon to see if it loads with the gradient?
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Attached is the stock create camera SVG for comparison.
And yes, I tried using their SVG's and they work fine.
Added the smoove icon.
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The difference I can see is how the gradient is styled in Inkscape...
<defs id="defs6"> <linearGradient inkscape;collect="always" id="linearGradient822"> <stop style="stop-color;#ff00ff;stop-opacity;1;" offset="0" id="stop818" /> <stop style="stop-color;#ffd2ff;stop-opacity;1" offset="1" id="stop820" /> </linearGradient> <linearGradient inkscape;collect="always" xlink;href="#linearGradient822" id="linearGradient824" x1="11.999999" y1="23.593208" x2="11.999999" y2="0.42856112" gradientUnits="userSpaceOnUse" /> </defs>
as compared to Sketch...
<defs> <linearGradient x1="50%" y1="0%" x2="50%" y2="100%" id="linearGradient-1"> <stop stop-color="#EAE7CA" offset="0%"></stop> <stop stop-color="#8C8A7B" offset="75.9797696%"></stop> <stop stop-color="#E7E4C5" offset="100%"></stop> </linearGradient> </defs>
Inkscape also introduces alot of additional code into the SVG file.
Try tweaking your gradient code to mimic the SketchUp code. Or ask someone with Sketch to save an SVG for you.
I know that in Inkscape there are various options when saving to SVG that cleans the code somewhat. Saving for print is different than saving for web.
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Confirmed - when I edited the SVG code to look like this:
<linearGradient x1="50%" y1="100%" x2="50%" y2="0%" id="linearGradient-1"> <stop stop-color="#ff00ff" offset="0%"></stop> <stop stop-color="#ffd2ff" offset="100%"></stop> </linearGradient>
then the gradient DID indeed show up.
So, anyone know of an app that will put the SVG code in a format SketchUp likes?
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Sketch but it is Mac only.
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Have you looked at post-processing like this:
https://jakearchibald.github.io/svgomg/ -
I pointed him to that earlier in the thread.
InkScape adds a lot of junk into the SVG code.
I suspect it’s the double linear gradient tags that are the problem.
OMGSVG doesn’t clean it sufficiently.
Still bizarre that SketchUp can’t read an SVG if the formatting is slightly different.
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Yeah, not sure what else to try. I guess I either stick with images or manually edit the SVG code so SketchUp will read it properly, for each icon. Which I have no desire to do, as I have 59 buttons as of now, so... yeah.
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For what it's worth, I think the problem with Inkscape is that it makes the gradient in two parts, and has the gradient units listed as "userSpaceOnUse", and I think SketchUp doesn't know what to do with that. SketchUp likes the X/Y portion to be formatted in percentages, not on-the-fly which the userSpaceOnUse implies.
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What about another editor like GIMP ?
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GIMP doesn't do vector graphics, no? It can import, but converts to raster. I tried a couple apps that work with SVG, to no avail - they all output different code in the SVG, and each one did different (incorrect) things when I tried to use them on my toolbar in SketchUp.
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@placidfury said:
or manually edit the SVG code so SketchUp will read it properly
Well, SVG is XML and Nokogiri would certainly be up to the task. Wouldn't even need SketchUp to do the processing...
Greg
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