SVG stands for <code>Scalable Vector Graphics</code>.
Here "scalable" means that, if you zoom in or out on an object, it would not appear pixelated. It scales with the display system, whether it's on a small mobile screen or a large TV monitor.
SVG is used to make common geometric shapes. Since D3 maps data into a visual representation, it uses SVG to create the shapes for the visualization. SVG shapes for a web page must go within an HTML <code>svg</code> tag.
CSS can be scalable when styles use relative units (such as <code>vh</code>, <code>vw</code>, or percentages), but using SVG is more flexible to build data visualizations.
Add an <code>svg</code> node to the <code>body</code> using <code>append()</code>. Give it a <code>width</code> attribute set to the provided <code>w</code> constant and a <code>height</code> attribute set to the provided <code>h</code> constant using the <code>attr()</code> or <code>style()</code> methods for each. You'll see it in the output because there's a <code>background-color</code> of pink applied to it in the <code>style</code> tag.
<strong>Note</strong><br>When using <code>attr()</code> width and height attributes do not have units. This is the building block of scaling - the element will always have a 5:1 width to height ratio, no matter what the zoom level is.
- text: The <code>svg</code> element should have a <code>width</code> attribute set to 500 or styled to have a width of 500px.
testString: assert($('svg').attr('width') == '500'||$('svg').css('width') == '500px', 'The <code>svg</code> element should have a <code>width</code> attribute set to 500 or styled to have a width of 500px.');
- text: The <code>svg</code> element should have a <code>height</code> attribute set to 100 or styled to have a height of 100px.
testString: assert($('svg').attr('height') == '100'||$('svg').css('height') == '100px', 'The <code>svg</code> element should have a <code>height</code> attribute set to 100 or styled to have a height of 100px.');