- From: Charles Pritchard <chuck@jumis.com>
- Date: Thu, 08 Oct 2009 14:09:54 -0700
My proposal for an aliasClipping property did not get much of a response. I suppose this topic is really one to be mediated between Chrome and Firefox developers, as they have taken two valid approaches to clipping. Marius Gundersen writes: "This sounds like a very good proposal, but can we extend it to include other things than just drawImage? I'm not sure how useful it would be, but it could perhaps include all the other drawing options, like stroking and filling paths created with lineTo, arc, etc." To Marius, I responded that indeed it would work with other things; use a fillRect across the extent of your clipping path. And there you go, aliased paths. Robert O'Callahan writes: I think "feathered" isn't a good term. It's vary rarely used ... I would just have boolean property named "antialias". To Robert: As there are no boolean types in the Canvas spec, I thought I'd stick with the current theme, and use a string. Though feathered is rarely used, I don't see why that's much of an issue. To the Entire Group (Please shout at me if you are on a Chrome or Firefox dev-team): I'd like to revise the proposal to again try to mediate the two different clipping methods. I'd certainly like to find a common naming scheme everyone agrees with. I'd like to grow this proposal to encompass the Chrome and Firefox implementations of globalCompositeOperation. There are two completely different renderings for various compositon modes in Chrome and Firefox. Chrome developers have certainly posted as to why they chose their method. Firefox devs have certainly taken their stand. I think they're both valid operations, but I'd like to have some unity. I propose that we add a property (lets find a name): strictClipping = "loose" (default) | "strict". The "loose" mode being the default, would be exemplified by Mozilla's implementations, and the "strict" mode is well implemented by Chrome. This would effect "clip()", source-in, source-out, destination-atop, and some other composition modes. It would allow us to create aliased paths (via fillRect and clip) as well as add versatility to the composition operators. Most importantly, it would unify Chrome, Firefox and WebKit in their Canvas implementations, in their next release.
Received on Thursday, 8 October 2009 14:09:54 UTC