42 comments

  • streptomycin 5 days ago

    I've been using html2canvas for a long time in https://play.basketball-gm.com/ so I gave your library a try. It was much slower (I know your README has benchmarks saying the opposite so idk) and the result looked a lot worse.

    html2canvas: https://i.imgur.com/zfSwNR1.png

    snapdom: https://i.imgur.com/FxowTzp.png

    Also I recommend putting the npm package name clearly in your README. I guess I don't really know what other people are doing these days, but I think most people are like me and consume packages like this from npm rather than a <script> tag.

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Thank you for testing it out and sharing the screenshots!

      I’ve run some performance tests using Vitest Bench, and SnapDOM was faster. I also created a few manual demos, and SnapDOM won in both speed and accuracy.

      That said, I still need to run more real-world tests. So, thanks again for your help!

    • tinchox6 2 days ago

      If interested I solved almost all issues you pointed out (speedy and accuracy).

      https://github.com/zumerlab/snapdom/issues/3

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      I added to README the npm / yarn reference. Thanks!

  • jdiff 5 days ago

    Capturing HTML as scalable SVGs is huge, how do you manage condensing all of CSS and its quirks into an SVG? Do you only support a subset of styling properties and rely on the browser to calculate layouts for you?

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      I was upset about the size of generated svg file because at first all styles were inlined in each element. So I created a function to make mini css classes (.c1, c2, c3,...) So the final size is quite small.

  • tinchox6 16 hours ago
  • krebby 5 days ago

    How does this compare to something like the the Media Capture API? Looks like this uses `canvas.toDataURL()` which can be slow to serialize compared to `toBlob` or `canvas.captureStream(0).getVideoTracks()`

    I've been using CropTarget.fromElement with a CaptureController: https://gist.github.com/akre54/e93ab2ce27999aecb109e38085f2e...

  • simonw 5 days ago

    Tiny feature request: snapdom.toJpg(el) appears to return a JPEG image where the background color for any transparent areas is set to black - it would be useful to be able to set that to another color (I needed it to be white).

  • Sephr 4 days ago

    Awesome! I was making exactly this library 13 years ago but only made it as far as creating CSS and other asset inlining+normalization tools before I ran into a few major roadblocks.

    The most significant roadblock was that drawing SVG <foreignObject> with inline subresources (data: and blob: URIs) tainted canvases in Chrome and Safari, and this was partially resolved in 2019[1].

    Notably, some issues still remain but apparently it's now workable. As is apparent from snapDOM, completely accurate CSS normalization is still an unsolved problem.

    While I'm excited to see the HTML-in-foreignObject use case mature, it is also important to point out that the Media Capture API now has the ability to capture individual elements natively in Chrome[2].

    1. https://issues.chromium.org/issues/41054640#comment49

    2. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CropTarget/...

  • ashishact 5 days ago

    Image in the readme would really be helpful. In fact anytime there is a visual output it makes sense to put an image. Thanks for creating this though - Will give it a try for an upcoming project.

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Thank you for the suggestion!

  • darrenf 5 days ago

    I’ve been writing a browser extension recently, and part of the functionality I want is to export part of a view as an image, shareable for the socials. I wanted to use html2canvas, but the docs explicitly advise against using it in a browser extension. Would snapDOM be suitable for inclusion in an extension?

    • genewitch 4 days ago

      Firefox has screenshot that auto-picks elements, or you can click and drag a crop, or you can save the whole page. That and ad nauseam are the reason I use firefox; that singlefile also works is great (single html file dump of a web page, somehow).

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Sincerely, I don't know if snapdom would work on a browser extension. I've never tested it on this scenery

  • G_o_D 5 days ago

    It doesnt load, snapdom dont appear in my devtools had to copy paste script

    Plus it just struck at pending promise dont work

    Plus css is messed up, i cant call it a snapshot, if it dont look same

    domtoimage lib works for me and is fast whole html body node captured within second

  • maxloh 5 days ago

    Maybe add a function to convert to PDF? I've always dreamed of converting an element or the document body to a long-scrolling PDF. I tried to implement it with Playwright Python, but I had no luck. The resulting PDF height is messed up.

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Its a bit out of scope right now, but I thing it would be possible using some external libraries such as jsPDF or svg2pdf.js

  • rs186 5 days ago
    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      It is pretty the same idea. There are many good solutions like dom-to-imge-more: the battle tested html2canvas, dom-to-image, modern-screenshot, etc. SnapDom is focused on avoiding long-taks whenever is possible because was designed to a zoomble UI engine that needs the capture doesnt affect the transition. But this is the first public version and there many things to adjust.

  • braebo 5 days ago

    I found puppeteer or playwright to be good at this with their screenshot method. I made a cli tool for this recently that worked quite well.

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Yes they are so good. But in my case I need to work only on the client side

  • badmonster 5 days ago

    Does snapDOM support capturing elements with CSS animations in their current frame, or does it only capture static states?

    • tinchox6 5 days ago

      Yes it capture elements with css animations in theirr current frame. It isnt't work for animted gifs. And I have to test js animations engines

  • andrewstuart 5 days ago

    Screenshots on the GitHub would be great.

    • Eduard 5 days ago

      Not only screenshots, but also actual results. As I understand the short description, this tool allows to transform a website's current visual state into an SVG.

  • nikeee 5 days ago

    Does it work with some DOM polyfill in Node.js?

  • imvetri 4 days ago

    How does it work

  • andrewstuart 5 days ago

    Why not do it at the back end where you can literally snapshot node to png.