Compare Scalable Vector Graphics and Raw Image Data formats — understand the key differences and when to use each
Scalable Vector Graphics
SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is an XML-based vector image format developed by the W3C. Unlike raster formats (JPG, PNG), SVG describes images using mathematical paths, shapes, and text, allowing them to scale to any size without quality loss — from a tiny icon to a billboard. SVG supports styling via CSS, animation via SMIL or JavaScript, interactivity, accessibility features, and embedded fonts. SVG files are typically much smaller than raster equivalents for logos, icons, and illustrations. Because SVG is text-based, it can be indexed by search engines, edited in any text editor, and manipulated with JavaScript in web applications. SVG supports filters, gradients, patterns, clipping, and masking. It's the standard format for web icons, logos, data visualizations (D3.js, Chart.js), and responsive graphics. All modern browsers natively render SVG.
Raw Image Data
Raw Image Data (.raw) is a image file format.
| Feature | SVG | RAW |
|---|---|---|
| Full Name | Scalable Vector Graphics | Raw Image Data |
| File Extension | .svg | .raw |
| Category | image | image |
| Free to Convert | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Browser Support | ✓ All Browsers | ✓ All Browsers |
| Convert to Each Other | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
或将文件拖放到此处
最大文件大小:2GB