
And needless to say, it does not react to saved file changes automatically. xsvg (from ) - I installed libsvg1_0.1.4-1_b, libsvg-cairo1_0.1.6-5_b and xsvg_0.2.1-3_b in that order those versions are from 2005, and so xsvg is extremely simple - no zoom, nothing.You just run it as: svg_compare.py and it opens up an svg and displays it using an svg library and using gtk's raster library. In post #8 - " I wrote a little python script.SVG Image Viewer? - Ubuntu Forums recommendations:.

Download Batik batik-1.7.zip unpack it run java -jar batik-squiggle.jar and there it is does not refresh the image automatically if the svg file changed on disk Squiggle, the SVG Browser The SVG browser that is part of the Batik toolkit.ImageMagick's display not only does not automatically refresh when the file changes on disk - and even when you press 'refresh' in display, you still do not get the latest version of the file (meaning, you have to restart display to show the latest version :( ).eog (Eye Of Gnome) - the latest versions - can also detect if a file changed on this, and then offer a 'Reload' button but apparently, you'd still have to click on 'Reload' each time (I cannot see a way to cause automatic reload always on file change in eog, like evince behaves with PDFs) - and also, at least on my Ubuntu 10.04, eog SVG support is somewhat broken (zoom in results with blurry lines).evince currently works like this for PDFs, but seemingly it cannot read SVG (for me it generates " Unable to open document - Error opening file: Permission denied" when I tried to load SVG files).

I usually work with SVG as text files, so would like the viewer to automatically refresh the display as soon as the file got saved (and its contents got changed) - this should be applicable to 'pipable' situations, I think (i.e.
