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void | cairo_select_font_face () |
void | cairo_set_font_size () |
void | cairo_set_font_matrix () |
void | cairo_get_font_matrix () |
void | cairo_set_font_options () |
void | cairo_get_font_options () |
void | cairo_set_font_face () |
cairo_font_face_t * | cairo_get_font_face () |
void | cairo_set_scaled_font () |
cairo_scaled_font_t * | cairo_get_scaled_font () |
void | cairo_show_text () |
void | cairo_show_glyphs () |
void | cairo_show_text_glyphs () |
void | cairo_font_extents () |
void | cairo_text_extents () |
void | cairo_glyph_extents () |
cairo_font_face_t * | cairo_toy_font_face_create () |
const char * | cairo_toy_font_face_get_family () |
cairo_font_slant_t | cairo_toy_font_face_get_slant () |
cairo_font_weight_t | cairo_toy_font_face_get_weight () |
cairo_glyph_t * | cairo_glyph_allocate () |
void | cairo_glyph_free () |
cairo_text_cluster_t * | cairo_text_cluster_allocate () |
void | cairo_text_cluster_free () |
The functions with text in their name form cairo's toy text API. The toy API takes UTF-8 encoded text and is limited in its functionality to rendering simple left-to-right text with no advanced features. That means for example that most complex scripts like Hebrew, Arabic, and Indic scripts are out of question. No kerning or correct positioning of diacritical marks either. The font selection is pretty limited too and doesn't handle the case that the selected font does not cover the characters in the text. This set of functions are really that, a toy text API, for testing and demonstration purposes. Any serious application should avoid them.
The functions with glyphs in their name form cairo's low-level text API. The low-level API relies on the user to convert text to a set of glyph indexes and positions. This is a very hard problem and is best handled by external libraries, like the pangocairo that is part of the Pango text layout and rendering library. Pango is available from http://www.pango.org/.
void cairo_select_font_face (cairo_t *cr
,const char *family
,cairo_font_slant_t slant
,cairo_font_weight_t weight
);
Note: The cairo_select_font_face()
function call is part of what
the cairo designers call the "toy" text API. It is convenient for
short demos and simple programs, but it is not expected to be
adequate for serious text-using applications.
Selects a family and style of font from a simplified description as a family name, slant and weight. Cairo provides no operation to list available family names on the system (this is a "toy", remember), but the standard CSS2 generic family names, ("serif", "sans-serif", "cursive", "fantasy", "monospace"), are likely to work as expected.
If family
starts with the string "cairo
:", or if no native font
backends are compiled in, cairo will use an internal font family.
The internal font family recognizes many modifiers in the family
string, most notably, it recognizes the string "monospace". That is,
the family name "cairo
:monospace" will use the monospace version of
the internal font family.
For "real" font selection, see the font-backend-specific
font_face_create functions for the font backend you are using. (For
example, if you are using the freetype-based cairo-ft font backend,
see cairo_ft_font_face_create_for_ft_face()
or
cairo_ft_font_face_create_for_pattern()
.) The resulting font face
could then be used with cairo_scaled_font_create()
and
cairo_set_scaled_font()
.
Similarly, when using the "real" font support, you can call directly into the underlying font system, (such as fontconfig or freetype), for operations such as listing available fonts, etc.
It is expected that most applications will need to use a more comprehensive font handling and text layout library, (for example, pango), in conjunction with cairo.
If text is drawn without a call to cairo_select_font_face()
, (nor
cairo_set_font_face()
nor cairo_set_scaled_font()
), the default
family is platform-specific, but is essentially "sans-serif".
Default slant is CAIRO_FONT_SLANT_NORMAL
, and default weight is
CAIRO_FONT_WEIGHT_NORMAL
.
This function is equivalent to a call to cairo_toy_font_face_create()
followed by cairo_set_font_face()
.
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
family |
a font family name, encoded in UTF-8 |
|
slant |
the slant for the font |
|
weight |
the weight for the font |
Since: 1.0
void cairo_set_font_size (cairo_t *cr
,double size
);
Sets the current font matrix to a scale by a factor of size
, replacing
any font matrix previously set with cairo_set_font_size()
or
cairo_set_font_matrix()
. This results in a font size of size
user space
units. (More precisely, this matrix will result in the font's
em-square being a size
by size
square in user space.)
If text is drawn without a call to cairo_set_font_size()
, (nor
cairo_set_font_matrix()
nor cairo_set_scaled_font()
), the default
font size is 10.0.
Since: 1.0
void cairo_set_font_matrix (cairo_t *cr
,const cairo_matrix_t *matrix
);
Sets the current font matrix to matrix
. The font matrix gives a
transformation from the design space of the font (in this space,
the em-square is 1 unit by 1 unit) to user space. Normally, a
simple scale is used (see cairo_set_font_size()
), but a more
complex font matrix can be used to shear the font
or stretch it unequally along the two axes
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
matrix |
a cairo_matrix_t describing a transform to be applied to the current font. |
Since: 1.0
void cairo_get_font_matrix (cairo_t *cr
,cairo_matrix_t *matrix
);
Stores the current font matrix into matrix
. See
cairo_set_font_matrix()
.
Since: 1.0
void cairo_set_font_options (cairo_t *cr
,const cairo_font_options_t *options
);
Sets a set of custom font rendering options for the cairo_t.
Rendering options are derived by merging these options with the
options derived from underlying surface; if the value in options
has a default value (like CAIRO_ANTIALIAS_DEFAULT
), then the value
from the surface is used.
Since: 1.0
void cairo_get_font_options (cairo_t *cr
,cairo_font_options_t *options
);
Retrieves font rendering options set via cairo_set_font_options.
Note that the returned options do not include any options derived
from the underlying surface; they are literally the options
passed to cairo_set_font_options()
.
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
options |
a cairo_font_options_t object into which to store the retrieved options. All existing values are overwritten |
Since: 1.0
void cairo_set_font_face (cairo_t *cr
,cairo_font_face_t *font_face
);
Replaces the current cairo_font_face_t object in the cairo_t with
font_face
. The replaced font face in the cairo_t will be
destroyed if there are no other references to it.
Since: 1.0
cairo_font_face_t *
cairo_get_font_face (cairo_t *cr
);
Gets the current font face for a cairo_t.
the current font face. This object is owned by
cairo. To keep a reference to it, you must call
cairo_font_face_reference()
.
This function never returns NULL
. If memory cannot be allocated, a
special "nil" cairo_font_face_t object will be returned on which
cairo_font_face_status()
returns CAIRO_STATUS_NO_MEMORY
. Using
this nil object will cause its error state to propagate to other
objects it is passed to, (for example, calling
cairo_set_font_face()
with a nil font will trigger an error that
will shutdown the cairo_t object).
Since: 1.0
void cairo_set_scaled_font (cairo_t *cr
,const cairo_scaled_font_t *scaled_font
);
Replaces the current font face, font matrix, and font options in
the cairo_t with those of the cairo_scaled_font_t. Except for
some translation, the current CTM of the cairo_t should be the
same as that of the cairo_scaled_font_t, which can be accessed
using cairo_scaled_font_get_ctm()
.
Since: 1.2
cairo_scaled_font_t *
cairo_get_scaled_font (cairo_t *cr
);
Gets the current scaled font for a cairo_t.
the current scaled font. This object is owned by
cairo. To keep a reference to it, you must call
cairo_scaled_font_reference()
.
This function never returns NULL
. If memory cannot be allocated, a
special "nil" cairo_scaled_font_t object will be returned on which
cairo_scaled_font_status()
returns CAIRO_STATUS_NO_MEMORY
. Using
this nil object will cause its error state to propagate to other
objects it is passed to, (for example, calling
cairo_set_scaled_font()
with a nil font will trigger an error that
will shutdown the cairo_t object).
Since: 1.4
void cairo_show_text (cairo_t *cr
,const char *utf8
);
A drawing operator that generates the shape from a string of UTF-8 characters, rendered according to the current font_face, font_size (font_matrix), and font_options.
This function first computes a set of glyphs for the string of text. The first glyph is placed so that its origin is at the current point. The origin of each subsequent glyph is offset from that of the previous glyph by the advance values of the previous glyph.
After this call the current point is moved to the origin of where
the next glyph would be placed in this same progression. That is,
the current point will be at the origin of the final glyph offset
by its advance values. This allows for easy display of a single
logical string with multiple calls to cairo_show_text()
.
Note: The cairo_show_text()
function call is part of what the cairo
designers call the "toy" text API. It is convenient for short demos
and simple programs, but it is not expected to be adequate for
serious text-using applications. See cairo_show_glyphs()
for the
"real" text display API in cairo.
Since: 1.0
void cairo_show_glyphs (cairo_t *cr
,const cairo_glyph_t *glyphs
,int num_glyphs
);
A drawing operator that generates the shape from an array of glyphs, rendered according to the current font face, font size (font matrix), and font options.
Since: 1.0
void cairo_show_text_glyphs (cairo_t *cr
,const char *utf8
,int utf8_len
,const cairo_glyph_t *glyphs
,int num_glyphs
,const cairo_text_cluster_t *clusters
,int num_clusters
,cairo_text_cluster_flags_t cluster_flags
);
This operation has rendering effects similar to cairo_show_glyphs()
but, if the target surface supports it, uses the provided text and
cluster mapping to embed the text for the glyphs shown in the output.
If the target does not support the extended attributes, this function
acts like the basic cairo_show_glyphs()
as if it had been passed
glyphs
and num_glyphs
.
The mapping between utf8
and glyphs
is provided by an array of
clusters. Each cluster covers a number of
text bytes and glyphs, and neighboring clusters cover neighboring
areas of utf8
and glyphs
. The clusters should collectively cover utf8
and glyphs
in entirety.
The first cluster always covers bytes from the beginning of utf8
.
If cluster_flags
do not have the CAIRO_TEXT_CLUSTER_FLAG_BACKWARD
set, the first cluster also covers the beginning
of glyphs
, otherwise it covers the end of the glyphs
array and
following clusters move backward.
See cairo_text_cluster_t for constraints on valid clusters.
cr |
a cairo context |
|
utf8 |
a string of text encoded in UTF-8 |
|
utf8_len |
length of |
|
glyphs |
array of glyphs to show |
|
num_glyphs |
number of glyphs to show |
|
clusters |
array of cluster mapping information |
|
num_clusters |
number of clusters in the mapping |
|
cluster_flags |
cluster mapping flags |
Since: 1.8
void cairo_font_extents (cairo_t *cr
,cairo_font_extents_t *extents
);
Gets the font extents for the currently selected font.
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
extents |
a cairo_font_extents_t object into which the results will be stored. |
Since: 1.0
void cairo_text_extents (cairo_t *cr
,const char *utf8
,cairo_text_extents_t *extents
);
Gets the extents for a string of text. The extents describe a
user-space rectangle that encloses the "inked" portion of the text,
(as it would be drawn by cairo_show_text()
). Additionally, the
x_advance and y_advance values indicate the amount by which the
current point would be advanced by cairo_show_text()
.
Note that whitespace characters do not directly contribute to the size of the rectangle (extents.width and extents.height). They do contribute indirectly by changing the position of non-whitespace characters. In particular, trailing whitespace characters are likely to not affect the size of the rectangle, though they will affect the x_advance and y_advance values.
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
utf8 |
a NUL-terminated string of text encoded in UTF-8, or |
|
extents |
a cairo_text_extents_t object into which the results will be stored |
Since: 1.0
void cairo_glyph_extents (cairo_t *cr
,const cairo_glyph_t *glyphs
,int num_glyphs
,cairo_text_extents_t *extents
);
Gets the extents for an array of glyphs. The extents describe a
user-space rectangle that encloses the "inked" portion of the
glyphs, (as they would be drawn by cairo_show_glyphs()
).
Additionally, the x_advance and y_advance values indicate the
amount by which the current point would be advanced by
cairo_show_glyphs()
.
Note that whitespace glyphs do not contribute to the size of the rectangle (extents.width and extents.height).
cr |
a cairo_t |
|
glyphs |
an array of cairo_glyph_t objects |
|
num_glyphs |
the number of elements in |
|
extents |
a cairo_text_extents_t object into which the results will be stored |
Since: 1.0
cairo_font_face_t * cairo_toy_font_face_create (const char *family
,cairo_font_slant_t slant
,cairo_font_weight_t weight
);
Creates a font face from a triplet of family, slant, and weight. These font faces are used in implementation of the the cairo_t "toy" font API.
If family
is the zero-length string "", the platform-specific default
family is assumed. The default family then can be queried using
cairo_toy_font_face_get_family()
.
The cairo_select_font_face()
function uses this to create font faces.
See that function for limitations and other details of toy font faces.
family |
a font family name, encoded in UTF-8 |
|
slant |
the slant for the font |
|
weight |
the weight for the font |
a newly created cairo_font_face_t. Free with
cairo_font_face_destroy()
when you are done using it.
Since: 1.8
const char *
cairo_toy_font_face_get_family (cairo_font_face_t *font_face
);
Gets the familly name of a toy font.
The family name. This string is owned by the font face and remains valid as long as the font face is alive (referenced).
Since: 1.8
cairo_font_slant_t
cairo_toy_font_face_get_slant (cairo_font_face_t *font_face
);
Gets the slant a toy font.
Since: 1.8
cairo_font_weight_t
cairo_toy_font_face_get_weight (cairo_font_face_t *font_face
);
Gets the weight a toy font.
Since: 1.8
cairo_glyph_t *
cairo_glyph_allocate (int num_glyphs
);
Allocates an array of cairo_glyph_t's. This function is only useful in implementations of cairo_user_scaled_font_text_to_glyphs_func_t where the user needs to allocate an array of glyphs that cairo will free. For all other uses, user can use their own allocation method for glyphs.
This function returns NULL
if num_glyphs
is not positive,
or if out of memory. That means, the NULL
return value
signals out-of-memory only if num_glyphs
was positive.
Since: 1.8
void
cairo_glyph_free (cairo_glyph_t *glyphs
);
Frees an array of cairo_glyph_t's allocated using cairo_glyph_allocate()
.
This function is only useful to free glyph array returned
by cairo_scaled_font_text_to_glyphs()
where cairo returns
an array of glyphs that the user will free.
For all other uses, user can use their own allocation method
for glyphs.
Since: 1.8
cairo_text_cluster_t *
cairo_text_cluster_allocate (int num_clusters
);
Allocates an array of cairo_text_cluster_t's. This function is only useful in implementations of cairo_user_scaled_font_text_to_glyphs_func_t where the user needs to allocate an array of text clusters that cairo will free. For all other uses, user can use their own allocation method for text clusters.
This function returns NULL
if num_clusters
is not positive,
or if out of memory. That means, the NULL
return value
signals out-of-memory only if num_clusters
was positive.
the newly allocated array of text clusters that should be
freed using cairo_text_cluster_free()
Since: 1.8
void
cairo_text_cluster_free (cairo_text_cluster_t *clusters
);
Frees an array of cairo_text_cluster's allocated using cairo_text_cluster_allocate()
.
This function is only useful to free text cluster array returned
by cairo_scaled_font_text_to_glyphs()
where cairo returns
an array of text clusters that the user will free.
For all other uses, user can use their own allocation method
for text clusters.
Since: 1.8
typedef struct { unsigned long index; double x; double y; } cairo_glyph_t;
The cairo_glyph_t structure holds information about a single glyph when drawing or measuring text. A font is (in simple terms) a collection of shapes used to draw text. A glyph is one of these shapes. There can be multiple glyphs for a single character (alternates to be used in different contexts, for example), or a glyph can be a ligature of multiple characters. Cairo doesn't expose any way of converting input text into glyphs, so in order to use the Cairo interfaces that take arrays of glyphs, you must directly access the appropriate underlying font system.
Note that the offsets given by x
and y
are not cumulative. When
drawing or measuring text, each glyph is individually positioned
with respect to the overall origin
glyph index in the font. The exact interpretation of the glyph index depends on the font technology being used. |
||
the offset in the X direction between the origin used for drawing or measuring the string and the origin of this glyph. |
||
the offset in the Y direction between the origin used for drawing or measuring the string and the origin of this glyph. |
Since: 1.0
Specifies variants of a font face based on their weight.
Since: 1.0
typedef struct { int num_bytes; int num_glyphs; } cairo_text_cluster_t;
The cairo_text_cluster_t structure holds information about a single text cluster. A text cluster is a minimal mapping of some glyphs corresponding to some UTF-8 text.
For a cluster to be valid, both num_bytes
and num_glyphs
should
be non-negative, and at least one should be non-zero.
Note that clusters with zero glyphs are not as well supported as
normal clusters. For example, PDF rendering applications typically
ignore those clusters when PDF text is being selected.
See cairo_show_text_glyphs()
for how clusters are used in advanced
text operations.
Since: 1.8