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    A number of vector graphics editors for various platforms exist. When choosing one for your work, important factors include its availability for your platform, its feature set, the maturity and convenience of the UI, as well as the focus of the program. Some programs are more suitable for artistic work while others are better for technical drawings. Also very important is an application's support of various vector and bitmap image formats for import and export.

        Comparison of vector graphics editors
            Some Packages in Detail
            General information
            Operating system support
            Basic features
            Vector file formats: Import
            Vector file formats: Export
            See also

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    Some Packages in Detail
    Adobe Illustrator is the industry-standard editor for professionals, and the AI file format is still the most common vector format for exchange. Illustrator is an expensive package, but it has a long history, and its deep feature set allows rapid creation of complex vector artwork. It has a steeper learning curve than some competing products, but a wider selection of reference materials is readily available.

    ConceptDraw offers a set of vector drawing tools that can rival a professional illustration program. It is aimed at flowcharting, diagramming and illustrating. It can be used to easily create data flow, UML and Entity Relationship diagrams, among others. Versions for Windows and Mac OS X are available.

    CorelDRAW has much in common with Adobe Illustrator and is regarded by many professionals as another industry-standard editor, laregely used in the graphic design, sign making and fashion design industries. CorelDRAW and Illustrator are capable of limited interoperation by reading each other's file formats. Major differences between the two include CorelDRAW's extensive array of more than 50 import and export filters, on-screen and dialog box editing and the ability to create multi-page documents. It can also generate TrueType and Type1 fonts, although refined typographic control is better suited to a more specific application. Some other features of CorelDRAW include the creation and execution of VBA macros, viewing of colour separations in print preview mode and integrated professional imposing options.

    Dia is a diagramming and vector graphics editor available for Windows, GNU/Linux and other UNIX-like Operating Systems. Dia is easy to use, with a modular design and several shape packages for different needs: flowcharting, network diagrams, circuit diagrams, etc. Its design was inspired by Microsoft Visio, although it uses a Single Document Interface similar to other GNOME software (such as The GIMP).

    Litha-Paint a web-based vector graphics editor available for Internet Explorer, FireFox and Opera. Currently it is in the alpha phase of development, can export SVG and use JPG and PNG images as a background. Users of Litha-Paint can save and share an unlimited number of documents via the Litha-Paint server, as well as uploading their images.

    Macromedia Flash Flash (now owned by Adobe) has facile vector editing tools which are popular with designers and illustrators. The most important of these tools are vector lines and fills with bitmap-like selectable areas, simple modification of curves and beziers (via the "direct selection" tool). Flash uses Actionscript for OOP scripting, and has some limited XML functionality. Flash can export to Illustrator .ai format but does not currently allow exporting to SVG format.

    Macromedia FreeHand, was an Illustrator competitor before Adobe's acquisition of Macromedia. Since then, it has been transferred to the classic print group, with no concrete announcements as-of-yet.

    Microsoft Visio is a diagramming and vector graphics editor available only for Windows. It is commonly used among small and medium sized businesses, as it comes bundled free with some versions of Microsoft Office.

    The Omni Group's OmniGraffle is a vector graphics editor available only for Macintosh. Some users claim that it is easier to use than the more expensive Illustrator, CorelDRAW, and FreeHand. It is principally used for creating flow charts and other diagrams. OmniGraffle imports and exports several popular formats, including Microsoft Visio, SVG and PDF.

    Inkscape is a Free and open source vector editor whose primary native format is SVG. Inkscape is especially popular on the GNU/Linux operating system, though it is available for Microsoft Windows, MacOS X and other UNIX-like systems. Currently Inkscape can officially import SVG and SVGZ, and export SVG, SVGZ, PostScript, EPS, EPSi, Adobe Illustrator, LaTeX and POVRay. Some formats have additional support through Inkscape extensions, including PDF, EPS, Adobe Illustrator, Dia and Sketch.

    OpenOffice.org Draw is part of the open source Office suite OpenOffice.org, serving as its drawing component and a vector graphics editor. It supports many import and export file formats, but there are currently functionality issues with some of these formats. Notably, the PNG and GIF bitmapped outputs are not antialiased, which gives a more jagged or pixelated look to the shapes (though opening the SVG in Inkscape and saving as PNG provides a workaround). The grid is fixed in size, and editing is less flexible than Inkscape in many ways.

    Xara Xtreme is a vector graphics editor for Windows. Xara Xtreme LX, the open source version of Xara Xtreme runs under GNU/Linux and Mac OS X operating systems. Xara Xtreme is notable for its high usability and very fast rendering. Xara Xtreme was the first vector graphics software product to provide fully antialiased display, advanced gradient fill and transparency tools.

    The following tables compare general and technical information for a number of vector graphics editors. Please see the individual products' articles for further information. This article is neither all-inclusive nor necessarily up-to-date.

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    General information
    This table gives basic general information about the different vector graphics editors:


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    Operating system support
    This table lists the operating systems that different editors can run on without emulation:


    "Unix" includes the similar Linux, BSD and unix-like operating systems.

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    Basic features


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    Vector file formats: Import


      via an extension, only version 7.0 or older.
      via an extension

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    Vector file formats: Export


      via an extension.
      support for many features is limited.

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    See also
     
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