.. | ||
cli.js | ||
index.d.ts | ||
index.js | ||
index.test-d.ts | ||
LICENSE | ||
package.json | ||
README.md | ||
shorter-css-color-names.js |
Mini SVG data:
URI
This tool converts SVGs into the most compact, compressible data:
URI that SVG-supporting browsers tolerate. The results look like this (169 bytes):
data:image/svg+xml,%3csvg xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' viewBox='0 0 50 50'
%3e%3cpath d='M22 38V51L32 32l19-19v12C44 26 43 10 38 0 52 15 49 39 22 38z'/%3e
%3c/svg%3e
Compare to the Base64 version (210 bytes):
data:image/svg+xml;base64,PHN2ZyB4bWxucz0iaHR0cDovL3d3dy53My5vcmcvMjAwMC9zdmciIH
ZpZXdCb3g9IjAgMCA1MCA1MCI+PHBhdGggZD0iTTIyIDM4VjUxTDMyIDMybDE5LTE5djEyQzQ0IDI2ID
QzIDEwIDM4IDAgNTIgMTUgNDkgMzkgMjIgMzh6Ii8+PC9zdmc+
Or the URL-encoded version other tools produce (256 bytes):
data:image/svg+xml;charset=US-ASCII,%3Csvg%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%
2F2000%2Fsvg%22%20viewBox%3D%220%200%2050%2050%22%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22M22%2038V51
L32%2032l19-19v12C44%2026%2043%2010%2038%200%2052%2015%2049%2039%2022%2038z%22%2
F%3E%3C%2Fsvg%3E
For a more realistic example, I inlined the icons from the Open Iconic project into CSS files with the 3 above methods:
Compression | Base64 | Basic %-encoding | mini-svg-data-uri |
---|---|---|---|
None | 96.459 kB | 103.268 kB | 76.583 kB |
gzip -9 |
17.902 kB | 13.780 kB | 12.974 kB |
brotli -Z |
15.797 kB | 11.693 kB | 10.976 kB |
Roughly 6% smaller compressed, but don't write off the ≈20% uncompressed savings either. Some browser caches decompress before store, and parsing time/memory usage scale linearly with uncompressed filesize.
Usage
var svgToMiniDataURI = require('mini-svg-data-uri');
var svg = '<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 50 50"><path d="M22 38V51L32 32l19-19v12C44 26 43 10 38 0 52 15 49 39 22 38z"/></svg>';
var optimizedSVGDataURI = svgToMiniDataURI(svg);
// "data:image/svg+xml,%3csvg xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2000/svg' viewBox='0 0 50 50'%3e%3cpath d='M22 38V51L32 32l19-19v12C44 26 43 10 38 0 52 15 49 39 22 38z'/%3e%3c/svg%3e"
You can also try it in your browser at RunKit.
CLI
If you have it installed globally, or as some kind of dependency inside your project’s directory:
mini-svg-data-uri file.svg # writes to stdout
mini-svg-data-uri file.svg file.svg.uri # writes to the given output filename
Use --help
for more info.
Warning
-
This does not optimize the SVG source file. You’ll want svgo or its brother SVGOMG for that.
-
The default output does not work inside
srcset
attributes. Use the.toSrcset
method for that:var srcsetExample = html` <picture> <source srcset="${svgToMiniDataURI.toSrcset(svg)}"> <img src="${svgToMiniDataURI(svg)}"> </picture>`;
-
The resulting Data URI should be wrapped with double quotes:
url("…")
,<img src="…">
, etc. -
This might change or break SVGs that use
"
in character data, like inside<text>
oraria-label
or something. Try curly quotes (“”
) or"
instead.
FAQ
Don’t you need a charset
in the MIME Type?
charset
does nothing for Data URIs. The URI can only be the encoding of its parent file — it’s included in it!
Why lowercase the URL-encoded hex pairs?
It compresses slightly better. No, really. Using the same files from earlier:
Compression | Uppercase (%AF ) |
Lowercase (%af ) |
---|---|---|
gzip -9 |
12.978 kB | 12.974 kB |
brotli -Z |
10.988 kB | 10.976 kB |
I did say slightly.
Browser support
- Internet Explorer 9 and up, including Edge
- Firefox, Safari, Chrome, whatever else uses their engines
- Android WebKit 3+
- Opera Mini’s server-side Presto