Tutorials References Exercises Videos Menu
Create Website Get Certified Upgrade

SVG <polygon>


SVG Polygon - <polygon>

The <polygon> element is used to create a graphic that contains at least three sides.

Polygons are made of straight lines, and the shape is "closed" (all the lines connect up).

Polygon comes from Greek. "Poly" means "many" and "gon" means "angle".


Example 1

The following example creates a polygon with three sides:

Sorry, your browser does not support inline SVG.

Here is the SVG code:

Example

<svg height="210" width="500">
  <polygon points="200,10 250,190 160,210" style="fill:lime;stroke:purple;stroke-width:1" />
</svg>
Try it Yourself »

Code explanation:

  • The points attribute defines the x and y coordinates for each corner of the polygon

Example 2

The following example creates a polygon with four sides:

Sorry, your browser does not support inline SVG.

Here is the SVG code:

Example

<svg height="250" width="500">
  <polygon points="220,10 300,210 170,250 123,234" style="fill:lime;stroke:purple;stroke-width:1" />
</svg>
Try it Yourself »


Example 3

Use the <polygon> element to create a star:

Sorry, your browser does not support inline SVG.

Here is the SVG code:

Example

<svg height="210" width="500">
  <polygon points="100,10 40,198 190,78 10,78 160,198"
  style="fill:lime;stroke:purple;stroke-width:5;fill-rule:nonzero;" />
</svg>
Try it Yourself »

Example 4

Change the fill-rule property to "evenodd":

Sorry, your browser does not support inline SVG.

Here is the SVG code:

Example

<svg height="210" width="500">
  <polygon points="100,10 40,198 190,78 10,78 160,198"
  style="fill:lime;stroke:purple;stroke-width:5;fill-rule:evenodd;" />
</svg>
Try it Yourself »