Smithery Logo
MCPsSkillsDocsPricing
Login
Smithery Logo

Accelerating the Agent Economy

Resources

DocumentationPrivacy PolicySystem Status

Company

PricingAboutBlog

Connect

© 2026 Smithery. All rights reserved.

    tazomatalax

    svg

    tazomatalax/svg
    Design
    5 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    Create precise, production-ready SVG graphics for technical and business contexts (diagrams, P&IDs, HMI/SCADA widgets, process flow visuals, PowerPoint/Office illustrations, UI icons, annotations)...

    SKILL.md

    SVG Creation Guide

    Create clean, scalable SVG that is easy to edit, prints well, and survives “real-world” tooling (PowerPoint, browser, PDF export, HMI toolchains).

    Working rules (keep SVG dependable)

    • Use a viewBox on every SVG.
    • Keep geometry simple: prefer path, rect, circle, line, polyline, polygon.
    • Prefer strokes for technical drawings; prefer fills for pictograms.
    • Use consistent naming and grouping: id on key groups, class for reusable styling.
    • Avoid renderer-fragile features unless asked:
      • Avoid: filter, mask, clipPath, foreignObject, blend modes, external images/fonts.
      • Use gradients sparingly; keep them simple (linearGradient/radialGradient).
    • Keep decimal precision reasonable (typically 2–3 decimals). Do not over-optimize readability away.

    Requirements to capture (ask only what matters)

    Capture enough to produce the correct output on the first pass.

    1. Target environment (drives compatibility)

      • Web / inline HTML
      • PowerPoint / Office
      • HMI/SCADA tool (name/version if known)
      • Engineering doc pipeline (PDF export, Visio, etc.)
    2. Canvas + scale

      • Desired physical size (mm/in) or slide size intent
      • Coordinate system preference (e.g., “0–100 grid”, “millimeters”, “pixels”)
      • Any snapping/grid requirements

      Useful conversions (SVG assumes 96 DPI for CSS pixels):

      • $1,\text{in} = 96,\text{px}$
      • $1,\text{mm} = 96/25.4 \approx 3.7795,\text{px}$
    3. Styling constraints

      • Stroke widths (e.g., 1.5 for primary lines, 1.0 for secondary)
      • Line caps/joins (round vs square)
      • Color palette (include corporate colors if relevant)
      • Light/dark background expectations
    4. Content + semantics

      • What objects exist (symbols, instruments, pipes, arrows, labels)
      • Layering needs (background, pipework, instrumentation, callouts)
      • Text rules (font family, size, casing, alignment)
    5. Deliverables

      • Number of variants (size/layout/color)
      • Editable text vs outlined text requirements
      • File naming convention and destination folder

    Output patterns (choose the right one)

    Pattern A: Technical diagram / P&ID style

    Use strokes, consistent line weights, and a simple palette. Prefer vector-effect="non-scaling-stroke" when objects will be scaled.

    Key tips:

    • Keep symbols as <g id="symbol-*"> groups.
    • Use stroke="currentColor" on symbols when you want themeable line art.
    • Align to a grid; keep elbows crisp with polyline.

    Pattern B: PowerPoint/Office-friendly illustration

    Prioritize compatibility:

    • Prefer inline presentation attributes (fill, stroke, stroke-width) over heavy CSS.
    • Avoid: masks/filters, complex gradients, marker arrows (Office support varies).
    • Keep text as <text> if the user wants to edit labels in PPT.
    • If the user needs pixel-perfect portability, provide an “outlined” version (text converted to paths) and warn it is no longer editable.

    Pattern C: HMI/SCADA widget

    Design for clarity at small sizes and for interaction:

    • Use generous hit areas (transparent rect with fill="transparent" for click/touch zones).
    • Keep state styling isolated (.state-ok, .state-alarm, .state-disabled).
    • Separate “skin” from “labels” so integrators can map tags and states.

    SVG skeleton (recommended)

    Use this as the default structure.

    <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 300 200" width="300" height="200" role="img" aria-labelledby="title desc">
      <title id="title">Diagram title</title>
      <desc id="desc">Short description of what is shown</desc>
    
      <defs>
        <style>
          .line { fill: none; stroke: #111827; stroke-width: 2; stroke-linecap: round; stroke-linejoin: round; }
          .thin { stroke-width: 1; }
          .fill { fill: #F3F4F6; }
          .text { fill: #111827; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; }
        </style>
      </defs>
    
      <g id="layer-background"></g>
      <g id="layer-geometry"></g>
      <g id="layer-annotations"></g>
    </svg>
    

    If targeting PowerPoint/Office and compatibility is uncertain, repeat critical attributes inline on elements (Office can be picky about CSS).

    Reference examples (copy/paste building blocks)

    1) P&ID-style pipe with arrow and tag

    <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 240 80" width="240" height="80">
      <g id="pipe" stroke="#111827" stroke-width="3" fill="none" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" vector-effect="non-scaling-stroke">
        <polyline points="20,40 160,40" />
        <!-- arrow head (Office-friendly: polygon instead of marker) -->
        <polygon points="160,32 160,48 178,40" fill="#111827" stroke="none" />
      </g>
    
      <g id="tag">
        <rect x="185" y="24" width="45" height="32" rx="6" fill="#FFFFFF" stroke="#111827" stroke-width="2" />
        <text x="207.5" y="45" text-anchor="middle" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="12" fill="#111827">P-101</text>
      </g>
    </svg>
    

    2) Simple valve symbol (line-art)

    <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 120 40" width="120" height="40">
      <g id="valve" stroke="#111827" stroke-width="3" fill="none" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" vector-effect="non-scaling-stroke">
        <line x1="10" y1="20" x2="35" y2="20" />
        <line x1="85" y1="20" x2="110" y2="20" />
        <polygon points="35,8 60,20 35,32" />
        <polygon points="85,8 60,20 85,32" />
      </g>
    </svg>
    

    3) HMI button (states via classes)

    <svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 220 70" width="220" height="70">
      <defs>
        <style>
          .btn { stroke: #0F172A; stroke-width: 2; rx: 12; }
          .ok { fill: #22C55E; }
          .alarm { fill: #EF4444; }
          .disabled { fill: #CBD5E1; }
          .label { fill: #0F172A; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 16px; font-weight: 700; }
        </style>
      </defs>
    
      <g id="button" class="ok">
        <rect class="btn ok" x="10" y="10" width="200" height="50" />
        <text class="label" x="110" y="42" text-anchor="middle" dominant-baseline="middle">START</text>
        <!-- hit area -->
        <rect x="10" y="10" width="200" height="50" fill="transparent" />
      </g>
    </svg>
    

    Quality checklist (run mentally before delivering)

    • Include viewBox; ensure shapes fit the viewBox with sane margins.
    • Keep stroke widths consistent and intentional.
    • Ensure text alignment is correct (text-anchor, dominant-baseline).
    • Keep groups layered predictably (layer-*).
    • Avoid external dependencies (no linked fonts/images) unless requested.
    • If PowerPoint/Office is the target, avoid unsupported features and prefer inline attributes.

    File outputs

    When saving multiple variants, use a naming convention that encodes intent:

    • asset-name__v1__editable.svg
    • asset-name__v1__outlined.svg
    • asset-name__dark.svg
    • asset-name__light.svg
    • asset-name__scale-0-100.svg

    Save files into a logical folder (e.g., assets/svg/ or a user-specified directory).

    Recommended Servers
    Draw.io
    Draw.io
    Excalidraw
    Excalidraw
    tldraw
    tldraw
    Repository
    tazomatalax/threedee
    Files