svg / d3.js rounded corner on one corner of a rectangle

Expanding on @robert-longson's answer, you can use SVG's elliptical arc commands to make the corners, in conjunction with lineto commands for the straight edges. These are used with path elements. Here's one possible implementation:

// Returns path data for a rectangle with rounded right corners.
// The top-left corner is ⟨x,y⟩.
function rightRoundedRect(x, y, width, height, radius) {
  return "M" + x + "," + y
       + "h" + (width - radius)
       + "a" + radius + "," + radius + " 0 0 1 " + radius + "," + radius
       + "v" + (height - 2 * radius)
       + "a" + radius + "," + radius + " 0 0 1 " + -radius + "," + radius
       + "h" + (radius - width)
       + "z";
}

You can then call this function to compute the "d" attribute. For example:

rects.enter().append("path")
    .attr("d", function(d) {
      return rightRoundedRect(x(0), y(d.name), x(d.value) - x(0), y.rangeBand(), 10);
    });

Live example:

  • http://bl.ocks.org/3468167

Optional: If you like, you could refactor the rightRoundedRect function to make it configurable, rather than taking lots of arguments. This approach would be similar to D3's built-in shape generators. For example, you might use a rect generator like so:

rects.enter().append("path")
    .attr("d", rightRoundedRect()
      .x(x(0))
      .y(function(d) { return y(d.name); })
      .width(function(d) { return x(d.value) - x(0); })
      .height(y.rangeBand())
      .radius(10));

For more details on that approach, see the configurable function tutorial.


Just to expand on the answers given, here is a more comprehensive function to return the path for your rect.

x: x-coordinate
y: y-coordinate
w: width
h: height
r: corner radius
tl: top_left rounded?
tr: top_right rounded?
bl: bottom_left rounded?
br: bottom_right rounded?

function rounded_rect(x, y, w, h, r, tl, tr, bl, br) {
    var retval;
    retval  = "M" + (x + r) + "," + y;
    retval += "h" + (w - 2*r);
    if (tr) { retval += "a" + r + "," + r + " 0 0 1 " + r + "," + r; }
    else { retval += "h" + r; retval += "v" + r; }
    retval += "v" + (h - 2*r);
    if (br) { retval += "a" + r + "," + r + " 0 0 1 " + -r + "," + r; }
    else { retval += "v" + r; retval += "h" + -r; }
    retval += "h" + (2*r - w);
    if (bl) { retval += "a" + r + "," + r + " 0 0 1 " + -r + "," + -r; }
    else { retval += "h" + -r; retval += "v" + -r; }
    retval += "v" + (2*r - h);
    if (tl) { retval += "a" + r + "," + r + " 0 0 1 " + r + "," + -r; }
    else { retval += "v" + -r; retval += "h" + r; }
    retval += "z";
    return retval;
}

In case others end up here wanting to round all corners of a rect element, you can add an rx attribute to the rect element (as @mbostock mentions in his fiddle above):

var rectangle = group.append("rect")
    .attr("width", 60)
    .attr("height", 75)
    .attr("rx", 4)
    .style("fill", function(d) { return "#e6653e"; })
    .style("stroke", function(d) { return d3.rgb("#e6653e").darker(); })