NGraphics is a cross platform library for rendering vector graphics on .NET. It provides a unified API for both immediate and retained mode graphics using high quality native renderers.
You can use it for cross platform rendering of UI widgets. Or as the basis for graphically rich interactive views. Or maybe you just want an easy way to import and export SVG and PNG files. Either way, I'm sure you'll find something interesting here.
The most important class is ICanvas. Uses canvases to render vector graphics (rectangles, ellipses, paths) to "something". Sometimes canvases are views on the screen, sometimes they are images -- you never really know.
We can draw a little house easily enough:
var canvas = Platforms.Current.CreateImageCanvas (new Size (100), scale: 2);
canvas.DrawEllipse (10, 20, 30, 30, Pens.Red, Brushes.White);
canvas.DrawRectangle (40, 50, 60, 70, brush: Brushes.Blue);
canvas.DrawPath (new PathOp[] {
new MoveTo (100, 100),
new LineTo (50, 100),
new LineTo (50, 0),
new ClosePath ()
}, brush: Brushes.Gray);
canvas.GetImage ().SaveAsPng (GetPath ("Example1.png"));Platforms.Current.CreateImageCanvas is just our tricky way to get a platform-specific ICanvas that we can rendered on. IImageCanvases are special because you can call GetImage to get an image of the drawing when you are done. We use a scale of 2 to render retina graphics and keep this README looking good.
Paths are drawn using standard turtle graphics.
When drawing, you have a choice of pens to stroke the object with or brushes to fill it with.
Anyway.
Pens can be any color and any width.
var canvas = Platforms.Current.CreateImageCanvas (new Size (120*5, 120), scale: 2);
canvas.Translate (20, 20);
for (var i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
canvas.DrawEllipse (
new Rect (new Size (80)),
pen: Pens.DarkGray.WithWidth (1 << i),
brush: Brushes.LightGray);
canvas.Translate (120, 0);
}
canvas.GetImage ().SaveAsPng (GetPath ("PenWidths.png"));Brushes can be solid colors or trippy multi-color gradients (linear and radial!)
There is no multi-layering within elements, so you will have to draw them a few times with different brushes to get complex effects.
What would a graphics library be without a Color class? Well, this one is a struct. Colors are light-weight, have fun with them.
Normally you will use the RGBA constructor of color: new Color (r, g, b, a) where each value can range from 0 to 1.
If you're not normal, you might prefer the web notation: new Color ("#BEEFEE").
Sometimes it's nice to hang onto the graphical elements themselves so that you can change them later, or perhaps cache them from an expensive-to-compute draw operation, or maybe you just want to sing to them. Whatever your needs, NGraphics exposes the following graphical elements:
Rectanglesare best used for drawing rectangles.Ellipsescan also be used to draw ovals and circles.Pathscan draw anything that you can imagine, and more. Lines, curves, turtles, they're all for the taking.
var circle = new Ellipse (new Rectangle (Point.Zero, new Size (10)));
ICanvas canvas = ...;
circle.Draw (canvas);
- Android (Xamarin) using Android.Graphics
CanvasCanvaswraps aAndroid.Graphics.Canvas
- iOS (Xamarin) using CoreGraphics
CGContextCanvaswraps aCoreGraphics.CGContext
- Mac (Xamarin) using CoreGraphics
CGContextCanvaswraps aCoreGraphics.CGContext
- .NET 4.5 using System.Drawing
GraphicsCanvaswraps aSystem.Drawing.Graphics
The NGraphics icon can be rendered using a simple repeating path:
var size = new Size (64);
var canvas = Platforms.Current.CreateImageCanvas (size, scale: 2);
canvas.SaveState ();
canvas.Scale (size);
canvas.Translate (1 / 8.0, 0);
var p = new Path ();
p.MoveTo (0, 1);
p.LineTo (0, 0);
p.LineTo (0.5, 1);
p.LineTo (0.5, 0);
var colors = new [] {
"#DCDCDD",
"#C5C3C6",
"#46494C",
"#4C5C68",
"#68A5E2",
};
foreach (var c in colors) {
p.Pen = new Pen (c, 1 / 4.0);
p.Draw (canvas);
canvas.Translate (1 / 16.0, 0);
}
canvas.GetImage ().SaveAsPng (GetPath ("Icon.png"));The MIT License (MIT)
See LICENSE for details.

