05-03-2018 10:13
05-03-2018 10:13
I am trying to draw an arc with dash or dotted border, I have tried using border css and stroke-dasharray (SVG property) but that didn't helped. Can anyone share some sample code or point me to the direction for generating a dotted arc. eg: Similar to Chronograph watch face by fitbit.
Thanks in advance.
Answered! Go to the Best Answer.
05-03-2018 13:49
05-03-2018 13:49
Hi modem,
have you tried the following options:
- using an image (not the best I agree)
- creating as many arcs as dash/dots you want in your dotted circle by changing the start-angle
eg:
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="359" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="29" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="59" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="89" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="119" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="149" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="179" sweep-angle="2" />
...
I think the second option is more well suited.
This may not be the best way, but this works.
Best Answer05-03-2018 13:49
05-03-2018 13:49
Hi modem,
have you tried the following options:
- using an image (not the best I agree)
- creating as many arcs as dash/dots you want in your dotted circle by changing the start-angle
eg:
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="359" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="29" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="59" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="89" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="119" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="149" sweep-angle="2" />
<arc x="30" y="30" width="240" height="240" fill="white"
arc-width="10" start-angle="179" sweep-angle="2" />
...
I think the second option is more well suited.
This may not be the best way, but this works.
Best Answer05-03-2018 21:53
05-03-2018 21:53
Thanks for the reply, Yes i did thought about using an image but I was looking for a more programmatic approach rather then relying on image. Before going ahead with the 2nd approach i would like to see if there is any other option available. Creating dash or dotted arcs by assembling a series of smaller arcs seems like an overkill for something that should be easily achievable.
Best Answer05-04-2018 00:08
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05-04-2018 00:08
There isn't a simple way for this unfortunately, I'd try the approach above.
Best Answer03-25-2020 05:58
03-25-2020 05:58
I needed to do something similar with a spinning dashed circle. I tried both approaches and would recommend the image approach in the end. While the arc one is nicer from the standpoint of a developer, it did not perform efficiently on a physical device.
I would also recommend using this page as a reference for the image. The functionality around grayscale images lets you easily change border color without having to touch the source image.
Best Answer