Appendix J: Minimizing SVG File Sizes
This appendix is informative, not normative.
Considerable effort has been made to make SVG file sizes as small
as possible while still retaining the benefits of XML and achieving
compatibility and leverage with other W3C specifications.
Here are some of the features in SVG that promote small file sizes:
- SVG's path data definition was defined to produce a compact data
stream for vector graphics data: all commands are one character in
length; relative coordinates are available; separator characters don't
have to be supplied when tokens can be identified implicitly; smooth
curve formulations are available (cubic beziers, quadratic beziers
and elliptical arcs) to prevent the need to tesselate into polylines;
and shortcut formulations exist for common forms of cubic bezier segments,
quadratic bezier segments, and horizontal and vertical straight line
segments so that the minimum number of coordinates need to be specified.
- Text can be specified using XML character data -- no need to convert to outlines.
- SVG contains a facility for defining symbols once and referencing
them multiple times using different visual attributes and different
sizing, positioning, clipping and client-side filter effects
- User agents that support styling with CSS
can use CSS selectors and property inheritance to define
commonly used sets of attributes once as named styles.
- Filter effects allow for compelling visual results and effects typically
found only in image-authoring tools using small amounts of vector and/or raster data
Additionally, HTTP 1.1 allows for compressed data to be passed from
server to client, which can result in significant file size reduction.
Here are some sample compression results using gzip compression on SVG documents:
Uncompressed
SVG |
With gzip
compression |
Compression
ratio |
12,912 |
2,463 |
81% |
12,164 |
2,553 |
79% |
11,613 |
2,617 |
77% |
18,689 |
4,077 |
78% |
13,024 |
2,041 |
84% |
A related issue is progressive rendering.
Some SVG viewers will support:
- the ability to display the first parts of an SVG document fragments
as the remainder of the document is downloaded from the server; thus,
the user will see part of the SVG drawing right away and interact with
it, even if the SVG file size is large.
- delayed downloading of images and fonts.
Just like some HTML browsers, some SVG viewers will download images
and Web fonts last, substituting a temporary image and system fonts,
respectively, until the given image and/or font is available.
Here are techniques for minimizing SVG file sizes and minimizing
the time before the user is able to start interacting with the SVG
document fragments:
- Construct the SVG file such that any links which the user might
want to click on are included at the beginning of the SVG file
- Use default values whenever possible rather than defining all attributes
and properties explicitly.
- Take advantage of the path data
data compaction facilities: use relative coordinates; use h
and v
for horizontal and vertical lines; use s
or t
for cubic and quadratic bezier segments whenever possible; eliminate
extraneous white space and separators.
- Utilize symbols if the same graphic appears multiple times in the document
- For user agents that support styling with CSS,
utilize CSS property inheritance and selectors to consolidate commonly
used properties into named styles or to assign the properties to a
parent <g> element.
- Utilize filter effects to help construct graphics via client-side
graphics operations.