This repository contains scalable vector graphics (svg) content for open usage by our research group and the greater public community.
Content in this repo should be contributed with the intention of being openly shared and compatible with the Creative Commons Public domain license CC0 to the greatest extent possible. Please feel free to contribute.
What is svg?
Scalable Vector Graphics (svg) is an open W3C standard for 2D vector graphics exchange over the world wide web. It is just a markup (xml) specification. svg files can be created, opened, and edited with any plain text editor. svg content can also be created with many open source or proprietary interactive graphics programs and can be viewed with any web browser. In the context of a web application, svg can be styled with css and scripted/animated with JavaScript.
Notes
The type of svg graphics added to this git repo should primarily be a mix of simple line drawings, shading, and text. Usage of raster/image data should be minimized. Though svg files can contain images-- either as embedded data or as a hypertext link to remote url-- embedded images get encoded as a base64 data format in svg graphics files. Base64 is a highly portable, but less efficient (e.g wasteful) way of storing real image data compared with raster formats like png/jpeg). Thus if the desired content does not require too many individual objects, it should just be composed as a vector graphic.
Graphics from here can then be openly patched into more complex figure/svg graphics for other projects.
All are welcome to contribute. The free and open source Inkscape drawing program is highly recommended for creating or editing svg graphics figures. Libreoffice has some nice diagramming tools as well. Graphviz (dot language) is good for diagrams of networks.
Network diagrams
With the open source graph visualization software GraphViz locally installed, the plain text .dot files can be edited and then rendered with a command like this:
dot ppc-circuits.dot -Tsvg -o ppc-circuits.svg
Fig caption test with md style links:
html style img links <img src="filename"> with or without absolute urls doesn't work with this git server rendering app:
But md style links  work with svgs and pngs: