Struct owned_ttf_parser::Face [−][src]
pub struct Face<'a> { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
A font face.
Provides a high-level API for working with TrueType fonts.
If you’re not familiar with how TrueType works internally, you should use this type.
If you do know and want a bit more low-level access - checkout FaceTables
.
Note that Face
doesn’t own the font data and doesn’t allocate anything in heap.
Therefore you cannot “store” it. The idea is that you should parse the Face
when needed, get required data and forget about it.
That’s why the initial parsing is highly optimized and should not become a bottleneck.
If you still want to store Face
- checkout
owned_ttf_parser. Requires unsafe
.
While Face
is technically copyable, we disallow it because it’s almost 2KB big.
Implementations
Creates a new Face
from a raw data.
index
indicates the specific font face in a font collection.
Use fonts_in_collection
to get the total number of font faces.
Set to 0 if unsure.
This method will do some parsing and sanitization, but in general can be considered free. No significant performance overhead.
Required tables: head
, hhea
and maxp
.
If an optional table has invalid data it will be skipped.
Creates a new Face
from provided RawFaceTables
.
Returns low-level face tables.
Returns the raw data of a selected table.
Useful if you want to parse the data manually.
Available only for faces created using Face::from_slice()
.
Checks that face is marked as Regular.
Returns false
when OS/2 table is not present.
Checks that face is marked as Italic.
Returns false
when OS/2 table is not present.
Checks that face is marked as Bold.
Returns false
when OS/2 table is not present.
Checks that face is marked as Oblique.
Returns false
when OS/2 table is not present or when its version is < 4.
Checks that face is marked as Monospaced.
Returns false
when post
table is not present.
Checks that face is variable.
Simply checks the presence of a fvar
table.
Returns face’s weight.
Returns Weight::Normal
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns face’s width.
Returns Width::Normal
when OS/2 table is not present or when value is invalid.
Returns face’s italic angle.
Returns None
when post
table is not present.
Returns a horizontal face ascender.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a horizontal face descender.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a horizontal face line gap.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a horizontal typographic face ascender.
Prefer Face::ascender
unless you explicitly want this. This is a more
low-level alternative.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns a horizontal typographic face descender.
Prefer Face::descender
unless you explicitly want this. This is a more
low-level alternative.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns a horizontal typographic face line gap.
Prefer Face::line_gap
unless you explicitly want this. This is a more
low-level alternative.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns a vertical face ascender.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a vertical face descender.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a vertical face height.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a vertical face line gap.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns face’s units per EM.
Guarantee to be in a 16..=16384 range.
Returns face’s x height.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present or when its version is < 2.
Returns face’s capital height.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present or when its version is < 2.
Returns face’s underline metrics.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when post
table is not present.
Returns face’s strikeout metrics.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns face’s subscript metrics.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns face’s superscript metrics.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when OS/2 table is not present.
Returns a total number of glyphs in the face.
Never zero.
The value was already parsed, so this function doesn’t involve any parsing.
Resolves a Glyph ID for a code point.
Returns None
instead of 0
when glyph is not found.
All subtable formats except Mixed Coverage (8) are supported.
If you need a more low-level control, prefer Face::character_mapping_subtables
.
Resolves a variation of a Glyph ID from two code points.
Implemented according to Unicode Variation Sequences.
Returns None
instead of 0
when glyph is not found.
Returns glyph’s horizontal advance.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns glyph’s vertical advance.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns glyph’s horizontal side bearing.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns glyph’s vertical side bearing.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns glyph’s vertical origin according to Vertical Origin Table.
Returns glyph’s name.
Uses the post
and CFF
tables as sources.
Returns None
when no name is associated with a glyph
.
pub fn outline_glyph(
&self,
glyph_id: GlyphId,
builder: &mut dyn OutlineBuilder
) -> Option<Rect>
pub fn outline_glyph(
&self,
glyph_id: GlyphId,
builder: &mut dyn OutlineBuilder
) -> Option<Rect>
Outlines a glyph and returns its tight bounding box.
Warning: since ttf-parser
is a pull parser,
OutlineBuilder
will emit segments even when outline is partially malformed.
You must check outline_glyph()
result before using
OutlineBuilder
’s output.
gvar
, glyf
, CFF
and CFF2
tables are supported.
And they will be accesses in this specific order.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns None
when glyph has no outline or on error.
Example
use std::fmt::Write;
use ttf_parser;
struct Builder(String);
impl ttf_parser::OutlineBuilder for Builder {
fn move_to(&mut self, x: f32, y: f32) {
write!(&mut self.0, "M {} {} ", x, y).unwrap();
}
fn line_to(&mut self, x: f32, y: f32) {
write!(&mut self.0, "L {} {} ", x, y).unwrap();
}
fn quad_to(&mut self, x1: f32, y1: f32, x: f32, y: f32) {
write!(&mut self.0, "Q {} {} {} {} ", x1, y1, x, y).unwrap();
}
fn curve_to(&mut self, x1: f32, y1: f32, x2: f32, y2: f32, x: f32, y: f32) {
write!(&mut self.0, "C {} {} {} {} {} {} ", x1, y1, x2, y2, x, y).unwrap();
}
fn close(&mut self) {
write!(&mut self.0, "Z ").unwrap();
}
}
let data = std::fs::read("tests/fonts/demo.ttf").unwrap();
let face = ttf_parser::Face::from_slice(&data, 0).unwrap();
let mut builder = Builder(String::new());
let bbox = face.outline_glyph(ttf_parser::GlyphId(1), &mut builder).unwrap();
assert_eq!(builder.0, "M 173 267 L 369 267 L 270 587 L 173 267 Z M 6 0 L 224 656 \
L 320 656 L 541 0 L 452 0 L 390 200 L 151 200 L 85 0 L 6 0 Z ");
assert_eq!(bbox, ttf_parser::Rect { x_min: 6, y_min: 0, x_max: 541, y_max: 656 });
Returns a tight glyph bounding box.
This is just a shorthand for outline_glyph()
since only the glyf
table stores
a bounding box. We ignore glyf
table bboxes because they can be malformed.
In case of CFF and variable fonts we have to actually outline
a glyph to find it’s bounding box.
When a glyph is defined by a raster or a vector image,
that can be obtained via glyph_image()
,
the bounding box must be calculated manually and this method will return None
.
Note: the returned bbox is not validated in any way. A font file can have a glyph bbox set to zero/negative width and/or height and this is perfectly ok. For calculated bboxes, zero width and/or height is also perfectly fine.
This method is affected by variation axes.
Returns a bounding box that large enough to enclose any glyph from the face.
pub fn glyph_raster_image(
&self,
glyph_id: GlyphId,
pixels_per_em: u16
) -> Option<RasterGlyphImage<'_>>
pub fn glyph_raster_image(
&self,
glyph_id: GlyphId,
pixels_per_em: u16
) -> Option<RasterGlyphImage<'_>>
Returns a reference to a glyph’s raster image.
A font can define a glyph using a raster or a vector image instead of a simple outline. Which is primarily used for emojis. This method should be used to access raster images.
pixels_per_em
allows selecting a preferred image size. The chosen size will
be closer to an upper one. So when font has 64px and 96px images and pixels_per_em
is set to 72, 96px image will be returned.
To get the largest image simply use std::u16::MAX
.
Note that this method will return an encoded image. It should be decoded by the caller. We don’t validate or preprocess it in any way.
Currently, only PNG images are supported.
Also, a font can contain both: images and outlines. So when this method returns None
you should also try outline_glyph()
afterwards.
There are multiple ways an image can be stored in a TrueType font
and this method supports only sbix
, CBLC
+CBDT
.
Font’s tables be accesses in this specific order.
Returns a reference to a glyph’s SVG image.
A font can define a glyph using a raster or a vector image instead of a simple outline. Which is primarily used for emojis. This method should be used to access SVG images.
Note that this method will return just an SVG data. It should be rendered or even decompressed (in case of SVGZ) by the caller. We don’t validate or preprocess it in any way.
Also, a font can contain both: images and outlines. So when this method returns None
you should also try outline_glyph()
afterwards.
Returns an iterator over variation axes.
Sets a variation axis coordinate.
This is the only mutable method in the library. We can simplify the API a lot by storing the variable coordinates in the face object itself.
Since coordinates are stored on the stack, we allow only 32 of them.
Returns None
when face is not variable or doesn’t have such axis.
Returns the current normalized variation coordinates.
Checks that face has non-default variation coordinates.
Trait Implementations
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<'a> RefUnwindSafe for Face<'a>
impl<'a> UnwindSafe for Face<'a>
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more