FreeType-2.2.1 API Reference

Base Interface

Synopsis

FT_LibraryFT_HAS_MULTIPLE_MASTERSFT_Load_Char
FT_FaceFT_STYLE_FLAG_XXXFT_LOAD_XXX
FT_SizeFT_Size_InternalFT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX
FT_GlyphSlotFT_Size_MetricsFT_Set_Transform
FT_CharMapFT_SizeRecFT_Render_Mode
FT_EncodingFT_SubGlyphft_render_mode_xxx
FT_Glyph_MetricsFT_Slot_InternalFT_Render_Glyph
FT_Bitmap_SizeFT_GlyphSlotRecFT_Kerning_Mode
FT_ModuleFT_Init_FreeTypeft_kerning_default
FT_DriverFT_Done_FreeTypeft_kerning_unfitted
FT_RendererFT_OPEN_XXXft_kerning_unscaled
FT_ENC_TAGFT_ParameterFT_Get_Kerning
ft_encoding_xxxFT_Open_ArgsFT_Get_Track_Kerning
FT_CharMapRecFT_New_FaceFT_Get_Glyph_Name
FT_Face_InternalFT_New_Memory_FaceFT_Get_Postscript_Name
FT_FaceRecFT_Open_FaceFT_Select_Charmap
FT_FACE_FLAG_XXXFT_Attach_FileFT_Set_Charmap
FT_HAS_HORIZONTALFT_Attach_StreamFT_Get_Charmap_Index
FT_HAS_VERTICALFT_Done_FaceFT_Get_Char_Index
FT_HAS_KERNINGFT_Select_SizeFT_Get_First_Char
FT_IS_SCALABLEFT_Size_Request_TypeFT_Get_Next_Char
FT_IS_SFNTFT_Size_RequestRecFT_Get_Name_Index
FT_IS_FIXED_WIDTHFT_Request_SizeFT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_XXX
FT_HAS_FIXED_SIZESFT_Set_Char_SizeFT_Get_SubGlyph_Info
FT_HAS_FAST_GLYPHSFT_Set_Pixel_Sizes
FT_HAS_GLYPH_NAMESFT_Load_Glyph


This section describes the public high-level API of FreeType 2.


FT_Library


  typedef struct FT_LibraryRec_  *FT_Library;


A handle to a FreeType library instance. Each ‘library’ is completely independent from the others; it is the ‘root’ of a set of objects like fonts, faces, sizes, etc.

It also embeds a memory manager (see FT_Memory), as well as a scan-line converter object (see FT_Raster).

For multi-threading applications each thread should have its own FT_Library object.


note

Library objects are normally created by FT_Init_FreeType, and destroyed with FT_Done_FreeType.


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FT_Face


  typedef struct FT_FaceRec_*  FT_Face;


A handle to a given typographic face object. A face object models a given typeface, in a given style.


note

Each face object also owns a single FT_GlyphSlot object, as well as one or more FT_Size objects.

Use FT_New_Face or FT_Open_Face to create a new face object from a given filepathname or a custom input stream.

Use FT_Done_Face to destroy it (along with its slot and sizes).

also

The FT_FaceRec details the publicly accessible fields of a given face object.


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FT_Size


  typedef struct FT_SizeRec_*  FT_Size;


A handle to an object used to model a face scaled to a given character size.


note

Each FT_Face has an active FT_Size object that is used by functions like FT_Load_Glyph to determine the scaling transformation which is used to load and hint glyphs and metrics.

You can use FT_Set_Char_Size, FT_Set_Pixel_Sizes, FT_Request_Size or even FT_Select_Size to change the content (i.e., the scaling values) of the active FT_Size.

You can use FT_New_Size to create additional size objects for a given FT_Face, but they won't be used by other functions until you activate it through FT_Activate_Size. Only one size can be activated at any given time per face.

also

The FT_SizeRec structure details the publicly accessible fields of a given size object.


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FT_GlyphSlot


  typedef struct FT_GlyphSlotRec_*  FT_GlyphSlot;


A handle to a given ‘glyph slot’. A slot is a container where it is possible to load any one of the glyphs contained in its parent face.

In other words, each time you call FT_Load_Glyph or FT_Load_Char, the slot's content is erased by the new glyph data, i.e., the glyph's metrics, its image (bitmap or outline), and other control information.


also

FT_GlyphSlotRec details the publicly accessible glyph fields.


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FT_CharMap


  typedef struct FT_CharMapRec_*  FT_CharMap;


A handle to a given character map. A charmap is used to translate character codes in a given encoding into glyph indexes for its parent's face. Some font formats may provide several charmaps per font.

Each face object owns zero or more charmaps, but only one of them can be ‘active’ and used by FT_Get_Char_Index or FT_Load_Char.

The list of available charmaps in a face is available through the ‘face->num_charmaps’ and ‘face->charmaps’ fields of FT_FaceRec.

The currently active charmap is available as ‘face->charmap’. You should call FT_Set_Charmap to change it.


note

When a new face is created (either through FT_New_Face or FT_Open_Face), the library looks for a Unicode charmap within the list and automatically activates it.

also

The FT_CharMapRec details the publicly accessible fields of a given character map.


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FT_Encoding


  typedef enum  FT_Encoding_
  {
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_NONE, 0, 0, 0, 0 ),

    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_MS_SYMBOL,  's', 'y', 'm', 'b' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_UNICODE,    'u', 'n', 'i', 'c' ),

    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_SJIS,    's', 'j', 'i', 's' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_GB2312,  'g', 'b', ' ', ' ' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_BIG5,    'b', 'i', 'g', '5' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_WANSUNG, 'w', 'a', 'n', 's' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_JOHAB,   'j', 'o', 'h', 'a' ),

    /* for backwards compatibility */
    FT_ENCODING_MS_SJIS    = FT_ENCODING_SJIS,
    FT_ENCODING_MS_GB2312  = FT_ENCODING_GB2312,
    FT_ENCODING_MS_BIG5    = FT_ENCODING_BIG5,
    FT_ENCODING_MS_WANSUNG = FT_ENCODING_WANSUNG,
    FT_ENCODING_MS_JOHAB   = FT_ENCODING_JOHAB,

    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_STANDARD, 'A', 'D', 'O', 'B' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_EXPERT,   'A', 'D', 'B', 'E' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_CUSTOM,   'A', 'D', 'B', 'C' ),
    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_LATIN_1,  'l', 'a', 't', '1' ),

    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_OLD_LATIN_2, 'l', 'a', 't', '2' ),

    FT_ENC_TAG( FT_ENCODING_APPLE_ROMAN, 'a', 'r', 'm', 'n' )

  } FT_Encoding;


An enumeration used to specify character sets supported by charmaps. Used in the FT_Select_Charmap API function.


note

Despite the name, this enumeration lists specific character repertories (i.e., charsets), and not text encoding methods (e.g., UTF-8, UTF-16, GB2312_EUC, etc.).

Because of 32-bit charcodes defined in Unicode (i.e., surrogates), all character codes must be expressed as FT_Longs.

Other encodings might be defined in the future.

values
FT_ENCODING_NONE

The encoding value 0 is reserved.

FT_ENCODING_UNICODE

Corresponds to the Unicode character set. This value covers all versions of the Unicode repertoire, including ASCII and Latin-1. Most fonts include a Unicode charmap, but not all of them.

FT_ENCODING_MS_SYMBOL

Corresponds to the Microsoft Symbol encoding, used to encode mathematical symbols in the 32..255 character code range. For more information, see ‘http://www.ceviz.net/symbol.htm’.

FT_ENCODING_SJIS

Corresponds to Japanese SJIS encoding. More info at at ‘http://langsupport.japanreference.com/encoding.shtml’. See note on multi-byte encodings below.

FT_ENCODING_GB2312

Corresponds to an encoding system for Simplified Chinese as used used in mainland China.

FT_ENCODING_BIG5

Corresponds to an encoding system for Traditional Chinese as used in Taiwan and Hong Kong.

FT_ENCODING_WANSUNG

Corresponds to the Korean encoding system known as Wansung. For more information see ‘http://www.microsoft.com/typography/unicode/949.txt’.

FT_ENCODING_JOHAB

The Korean standard character set (KS C-5601-1992), which corresponds to MS Windows code page 1361. This character set includes all possible Hangeul character combinations.

FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_LATIN_1

Corresponds to a Latin-1 encoding as defined in a Type 1 Postscript font. It is limited to 256 character codes.

FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_STANDARD

Corresponds to the Adobe Standard encoding, as found in Type 1, CFF, and OpenType/CFF fonts. It is limited to 256 character codes.

FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_EXPERT

Corresponds to the Adobe Expert encoding, as found in Type 1, CFF, and OpenType/CFF fonts. It is limited to 256 character codes.

FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_CUSTOM

Corresponds to a custom encoding, as found in Type 1, CFF, and OpenType/CFF fonts. It is limited to 256 character codes.

FT_ENCODING_APPLE_ROMAN

Corresponds to the 8-bit Apple roman encoding. Many TrueType and OpenType fonts contain a charmap for this encoding, since older versions of Mac OS are able to use it.

FT_ENCODING_OLD_LATIN_2

This value is deprecated and was never used nor reported by FreeType. Don't use or test for it.

FT_ENCODING_MS_SJIS

Same as FT_ENCODING_SJIS. Deprecated.

FT_ENCODING_MS_GB2312

Same as FT_ENCODING_GB2312. Deprecated.

FT_ENCODING_MS_BIG5

Same as FT_ENCODING_BIG5. Deprecated.

FT_ENCODING_MS_WANSUNG

Same as FT_ENCODING_WANSUNG. Deprecated.

FT_ENCODING_MS_JOHAB

Same as FT_ENCODING_JOHAB. Deprecated.

note

By default, FreeType automatically synthetizes a Unicode charmap for Postscript fonts, using their glyph names dictionaries. However, it also reports the encodings defined explicitly in the font file, for the cases when they are needed, with the Adobe values as well.

FT_ENCODING_NONE is set by the BDF and PCF drivers if the charmap is neither Unicode nor ISO-8859-1 (otherwise it is set to FT_ENCODING_UNICODE). Use FT_Get_BDF_Charset_ID to find out which encoding is really present. If, for example, the ‘cs_registry’ field is ‘KOI8’ and the ‘cs_encoding’ field is ‘R’, the font is encoded in KOI8-R.

FT_ENCODING_NONE is always set (with a single exception) by the winfonts driver. Use FT_Get_WinFNT_Header and examine the ‘charset’ field of the FT_WinFNT_HeaderRec structure to find out which encoding is really present. For example, FT_WinFNT_ID_CP1251 (204) means Windows code page 1251 (for Russian).

FT_ENCODING_NONE is set if ‘platform_id’ is TT_PLATFORM_MACINTOSH and ‘encoding_id’ is not TT_MAC_ID_ROMAN (otherwise it is set to FT_ENCODING_APPLE_ROMAN).

If ‘platform_id’ is TT_PLATFORM_MACINTOSH, use the function c FT_Get_CMap_Language_ID to query the Mac language ID which may be needed to be able to distinguish Apple encoding variants. See

http://www.unicode.org/Public/MAPPINGS/VENDORS/APPLE/README.TXT

to get an idea how to do that. Basically, if the language ID is 0, dont use it, otherwise subtract 1 from the language ID. Then examine ‘encoding_id’. If, for example, ‘encoding_id’ is TT_MAC_ID_ROMAN and the language ID (minus 1) is ‘TT_MAC_LANGID_GREEK’, it is the Greek encoding, not Roman. TT_MAC_ID_ARABIC with ‘TT_MAC_LANGID_FARSI’ means the Farsi variant the Arabic encoding.


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FT_Glyph_Metrics


  typedef struct  FT_Glyph_Metrics_
  {
    FT_Pos  width;
    FT_Pos  height;

    FT_Pos  horiBearingX;
    FT_Pos  horiBearingY;
    FT_Pos  horiAdvance;

    FT_Pos  vertBearingX;
    FT_Pos  vertBearingY;
    FT_Pos  vertAdvance;

  } FT_Glyph_Metrics;


A structure used to model the metrics of a single glyph. The values are expressed in 26.6 fractional pixel format; if the flag FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE has been used while loading the glyph, values are expressed in font units instead.


fields
width

The glyph's width.

height

The glyph's height.

horiBearingX

Left side bearing for horizontal layout.

horiBearingY

Top side bearing for horizontal layout.

horiAdvance

Advance width for horizontal layout.

vertBearingX

Left side bearing for vertical layout.

vertBearingY

Top side bearing for vertical layout.

vertAdvance

Advance height for vertical layout.


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FT_Bitmap_Size


  typedef struct  FT_Bitmap_Size_
  {
    FT_Short  height;
    FT_Short  width;

    FT_Pos    size;

    FT_Pos    x_ppem;
    FT_Pos    y_ppem;

  } FT_Bitmap_Size;


This structure models the metrics of a bitmap strike (i.e., a set of glyphs for a given point size and resolution) in a bitmap font. It is used for the ‘available_sizes’ field of FT_Face.


fields
height

The vertical distance, in pixels, between two consecutive baselines. It is always positive.

width

The average width, in pixels, of all glyphs in the strike.

size

The nominal size of the strike in 26.6 fractional points. This field is not very useful.

x_ppem

The horizontal ppem (nominal width) in 26.6 fractional pixels.

y_ppem

The vertical ppem (nominal height) in 26.6 fractional pixels.

note

Windows FNT: The nominal size given in a FNT font is not reliable. Thus when the driver finds it incorrect, it sets ‘size’ to some calculated values and sets ‘x_ppem’ and ‘y_ppem’ to the pixel width and height given in the font, respectively.

TrueType embedded bitmaps: ‘size’, ‘width’, and ‘height’ values are not contained in the bitmap strike itself. They are computed from the global font parameters.


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FT_Module


  typedef struct FT_ModuleRec_*  FT_Module;


A handle to a given FreeType module object. Each module can be a font driver, a renderer, or anything else that provides services to the formers.



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FT_Driver


  typedef struct FT_DriverRec_*  FT_Driver;


A handle to a given FreeType font driver object. Each font driver is a special module capable of creating faces from font files.



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FT_Renderer


  typedef struct FT_RendererRec_*  FT_Renderer;


A handle to a given FreeType renderer. A renderer is a special module in charge of converting a glyph image to a bitmap, when necessary. Each renderer supports a given glyph image format, and one or more target surface depths.



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FT_ENC_TAG


#ifndef FT_ENC_TAG
#define FT_ENC_TAG( value, a, b, c, d )         \
          value = ( ( (FT_UInt32)(a) << 24 ) |  \
                    ( (FT_UInt32)(b) << 16 ) |  \
                    ( (FT_UInt32)(c) <<  8 ) |  \
                      (FT_UInt32)(d)         )

#endif /* FT_ENC_TAG */


This macro converts four-letter tags into an unsigned long. It is used to define ‘encoding’ identifiers (see FT_Encoding).


note

Since many 16bit compilers don't like 32bit enumerations, you should redefine this macro in case of problems to something like this:

  #define FT_ENC_TAG( value, a, b, c, d )  value                   

to get a simple enumeration without assigning special numbers.


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ft_encoding_xxx


#define ft_encoding_none            FT_ENCODING_NONE
#define ft_encoding_unicode         FT_ENCODING_UNICODE
#define ft_encoding_symbol          FT_ENCODING_MS_SYMBOL
#define ft_encoding_latin_1         FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_LATIN_1
#define ft_encoding_latin_2         FT_ENCODING_OLD_LATIN_2
#define ft_encoding_sjis            FT_ENCODING_SJIS
#define ft_encoding_gb2312          FT_ENCODING_GB2312
#define ft_encoding_big5            FT_ENCODING_BIG5
#define ft_encoding_wansung         FT_ENCODING_WANSUNG
#define ft_encoding_johab           FT_ENCODING_JOHAB

#define ft_encoding_adobe_standard  FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_STANDARD
#define ft_encoding_adobe_expert    FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_EXPERT
#define ft_encoding_adobe_custom    FT_ENCODING_ADOBE_CUSTOM
#define ft_encoding_apple_roman     FT_ENCODING_APPLE_ROMAN


These constants are deprecated; use the corresponding FT_Encoding values instead.



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FT_CharMapRec


  typedef struct  FT_CharMapRec_
  {
    FT_Face      face;
    FT_Encoding  encoding;
    FT_UShort    platform_id;
    FT_UShort    encoding_id;

  } FT_CharMapRec;


The base charmap structure.


fields
face

A handle to the parent face object.

encoding

An FT_Encoding tag identifying the charmap. Use this with FT_Select_Charmap.

platform_id

An ID number describing the platform for the following encoding ID. This comes directly from the TrueType specification and should be emulated for other formats.

encoding_id

A platform specific encoding number. This also comes from the TrueType specification and should be emulated similarly.


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FT_Face_Internal


  typedef struct FT_Face_InternalRec_*  FT_Face_Internal;


An opaque handle to an ‘FT_Face_InternalRec’ structure, used to model private data of a given FT_Face object.

This structure might change between releases of FreeType 2 and is not generally available to client applications.



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FT_FaceRec


  typedef struct  FT_FaceRec_
  {
    FT_Long           num_faces;
    FT_Long           face_index;

    FT_Long           face_flags;
    FT_Long           style_flags;

    FT_Long           num_glyphs;

    FT_String*        family_name;
    FT_String*        style_name;

    FT_Int            num_fixed_sizes;
    FT_Bitmap_Size*   available_sizes;

    FT_Int            num_charmaps;
    FT_CharMap*       charmaps;

    FT_Generic        generic;

    /*# the following are only relevant to scalable outlines */
    FT_BBox           bbox;

    FT_UShort         units_per_EM;
    FT_Short          ascender;
    FT_Short          descender;
    FT_Short          height;

    FT_Short          max_advance_width;
    FT_Short          max_advance_height;

    FT_Short          underline_position;
    FT_Short          underline_thickness;

    FT_GlyphSlot      glyph;
    FT_Size           size;
    FT_CharMap        charmap;

    /*@private begin */

    FT_Driver         driver;
    FT_Memory         memory;
    FT_Stream         stream;

    FT_ListRec        sizes_list;

    FT_Generic        autohint;
    void*             extensions;

    FT_Face_Internal  internal;

    /*@private end */

  } FT_FaceRec;


FreeType root face class structure. A face object models a typeface in a font file.


fields
num_faces

The number of faces in the font file. Some font formats can have multiple faces in a font file.

face_index

The index of the face in the font file. It is set to 0 if there is only one face in the font file.

face_flags

A set of bit flags that give important information about the face; see FT_FACE_FLAG_XXX for the details.

style_flags

A set of bit flags indicating the style of the face; see FT_STYLE_FLAG_XXX for the details.

num_glyphs

The number of glyphs in the face. If the face is scalable and has sbits (see ‘num_fixed_sizes’), it is set to the number of outline glyphs.

family_name

The face's family name. This is an ASCII string, usually in English, which describes the typeface's family (like ‘Times New Roman’, ‘Bodoni’, ‘Garamond’, etc). This is a least common denominator used to list fonts. Some formats (TrueType & OpenType) provide localized and Unicode versions of this string. Applications should use the format specific interface to access them.

style_name

The face's style name. This is an ASCII string, usually in English, which describes the typeface's style (like ‘Italic’, ‘Bold’, ‘Condensed’, etc). Not all font formats provide a style name, so this field is optional, and can be set to NULL. As for ‘family_name’, some formats provide localized and Unicode versions of this string. Applications should use the format specific interface to access them.

num_fixed_sizes

The number of bitmap strikes in the face. Even if the face is scalable, there might still be bitmap strikes, which are called ‘sbits’ in that case.

available_sizes

An array of FT_Bitmap_Size for all bitmap strikes in the face. It is set to NULL if there is no bitmap strike.

num_charmaps

The number of charmaps in the face.

charmaps

An array of the charmaps of the face.

generic

A field reserved for client uses. See the FT_Generic type description.

bbox

The font bounding box. Coordinates are expressed in font units (see ‘units_per_EM’). The box is large enough to contain any glyph from the font. Thus, ‘bbox.yMax’ can be seen as the ‘maximal ascender’, and ‘bbox.yMin’ as the ‘minimal descender’. Only relevant for scalable formats.

units_per_EM

The number of font units per EM square for this face. This is typically 2048 for TrueType fonts, and 1000 for Type 1 fonts. Only relevant for scalable formats.

ascender

The typographic ascender of the face, expressed in font units. For font formats not having this information, it is set to ‘bbox.yMax’. Only relevant for scalable formats.

descender

The typographic descender of the face, expressed in font units. For font formats not having this information, it is set to ‘bbox.yMin’. Note that this field is usually negative. Only relevant for scalable formats.

height

The height is the vertical distance between two consecutive baselines, expressed in font units. It is always positive. Only relevant for scalable formats.

max_advance_width

The maximal advance width, in font units, for all glyphs in this face. This can be used to make word wrapping computations faster. Only relevant for scalable formats.

max_advance_height

The maximal advance height, in font units, for all glyphs in this face. This is only relevant for vertical layouts, and is set to ‘height’ for fonts that do not provide vertical metrics. Only relevant for scalable formats.

underline_position

The position, in font units, of the underline line for this face. It's the center of the underlining stem. Only relevant for scalable formats.

underline_thickness

The thickness, in font units, of the underline for this face. Only relevant for scalable formats.

glyph

The face's associated glyph slot(s).

size

The current active size for this face.

charmap

The current active charmap for this face.

note

Fields may be changed after a call to FT_Attach_File or FT_Attach_Stream.


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FT_FACE_FLAG_XXX


#define FT_FACE_FLAG_SCALABLE          ( 1L <<  0 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_SIZES       ( 1L <<  1 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_WIDTH       ( 1L <<  2 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_SFNT              ( 1L <<  3 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_HORIZONTAL        ( 1L <<  4 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_VERTICAL          ( 1L <<  5 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_KERNING           ( 1L <<  6 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_FAST_GLYPHS       ( 1L <<  7 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_MULTIPLE_MASTERS  ( 1L <<  8 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_GLYPH_NAMES       ( 1L <<  9 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_EXTERNAL_STREAM   ( 1L << 10 )
#define FT_FACE_FLAG_HINTER            ( 1L << 11 )


A list of bit flags used in the ‘face_flags’ field of the FT_FaceRec structure. They inform client applications of properties of the corresponding face.


values
FT_FACE_FLAG_SCALABLE

Indicates that the face contains outline glyphs. This doesn't prevent bitmap strikes, i.e., a face can have both this and and FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_SIZES set.

FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_SIZES

Indicates that the face contains bitmap strikes. See also the ‘num_fixed_sizes’ and ‘available_sizes’ fields of FT_FaceRec.

FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_WIDTH

Indicates that the face contains fixed-width characters (like Courier, Lucido, MonoType, etc.).

FT_FACE_FLAG_SFNT

Indicates that the face uses the ‘sfnt’ storage scheme. For now, this means TrueType and OpenType.

FT_FACE_FLAG_HORIZONTAL

Indicates that the face contains horizontal glyph metrics. This should be set for all common formats.

FT_FACE_FLAG_VERTICAL

Indicates that the face contains vertical glyph metrics. This is only available in some formats, not all of them.

FT_FACE_FLAG_KERNING

Indicates that the face contains kerning information. If set, the kerning distance can be retrieved through the function FT_Get_Kerning. Otherwise the function always return the vector (0,0). Note that FreeType doesn't handle kerning data from the ‘GPOS’ table (as present in some OpenType fonts).

FT_FACE_FLAG_FAST_GLYPHS

THIS FLAG IS DEPRECATED. DO NOT USE OR TEST IT.

FT_FACE_FLAG_MULTIPLE_MASTERS

Indicates that the font contains multiple masters and is capable of interpolating between them. See the multiple-masters specific API for details.

FT_FACE_FLAG_GLYPH_NAMES

Indicates that the font contains glyph names that can be retrieved through FT_Get_Glyph_Name. Note that some TrueType fonts contain broken glyph name tables. Use the function FT_Has_PS_Glyph_Names when needed.

FT_FACE_FLAG_EXTERNAL_STREAM

Used internally by FreeType to indicate that a face's stream was provided by the client application and should not be destroyed when FT_Done_Face is called. Don't read or test this flag.

FT_FACE_FLAG_HINTER

Set if the font driver has a hinting machine of its own. For example, with TrueType fonts, it makes sense to use data from the SFNT ‘gasp’ table only if the native TrueType hinting engine (with the bytecode interpreter) is available and active.


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FT_HAS_HORIZONTAL


#define FT_HAS_HORIZONTAL( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_HORIZONTAL )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains horizontal metrics (this is true for all font formats though).


also

FT_HAS_VERTICAL can be used to check for vertical metrics.


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FT_HAS_VERTICAL


#define FT_HAS_VERTICAL( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_VERTICAL )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains vertical metrics.



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FT_HAS_KERNING


#define FT_HAS_KERNING( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_KERNING )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains kerning data that can be accessed with FT_Get_Kerning.



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FT_IS_SCALABLE


#define FT_IS_SCALABLE( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_SCALABLE )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains a scalable font face (true for TrueType, Type 1, Type 42, CID, OpenType/CFF, and PFR font formats.



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FT_IS_SFNT


#define FT_IS_SFNT( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_SFNT )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains a font whose format is based on the SFNT storage scheme. This usually means: TrueType fonts, OpenType fonts, as well as SFNT-based embedded bitmap fonts.

If this macro is true, all functions defined in FT_SFNT_NAMES_H and FT_TRUETYPE_TABLES_H are available.



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FT_IS_FIXED_WIDTH


#define FT_IS_FIXED_WIDTH( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_WIDTH )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains a font face that contains fixed-width (or ‘monospace’, ‘fixed-pitch’, etc.) glyphs.



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FT_HAS_FIXED_SIZES


#define FT_HAS_FIXED_SIZES( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_SIZES )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains some embedded bitmaps. See the ‘available_sizes’ field of the FT_FaceRec structure.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_HAS_FAST_GLYPHS


#define FT_HAS_FAST_GLYPHS( face )  0


Deprecated.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_HAS_GLYPH_NAMES


#define FT_HAS_GLYPH_NAMES( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_GLYPH_NAMES )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains some glyph names that can be accessed through FT_Get_Glyph_Name.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_HAS_MULTIPLE_MASTERS


#define FT_HAS_MULTIPLE_MASTERS( face ) \
          ( face->face_flags & FT_FACE_FLAG_MULTIPLE_MASTERS )


A macro that returns true whenever a face object contains some multiple masters. The functions provided by FT_MULTIPLE_MASTERS_H are then available to choose the exact design you want.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_STYLE_FLAG_XXX


#define FT_STYLE_FLAG_ITALIC  ( 1 << 0 )
#define FT_STYLE_FLAG_BOLD    ( 1 << 1 )


A list of bit-flags used to indicate the style of a given face. These are used in the ‘style_flags’ field of FT_FaceRec.


values
FT_STYLE_FLAG_ITALIC

Indicates that a given face is italicized.

FT_STYLE_FLAG_BOLD

Indicates that a given face is bold.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Size_Internal


  typedef struct FT_Size_InternalRec_*  FT_Size_Internal;


An opaque handle to an ‘FT_Size_InternalRec’ structure, used to model private data of a given FT_Size object.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_Size_Metrics


  typedef struct  FT_Size_Metrics_
  {
    FT_UShort  x_ppem;      /* horizontal pixels per EM               */
    FT_UShort  y_ppem;      /* vertical pixels per EM                 */

    FT_Fixed   x_scale;     /* scaling values used to convert font    */
    FT_Fixed   y_scale;     /* units to 26.6 fractional pixels        */

    FT_Pos     ascender;    /* ascender in 26.6 frac. pixels          */
    FT_Pos     descender;   /* descender in 26.6 frac. pixels         */
    FT_Pos     height;      /* text height in 26.6 frac. pixels       */
    FT_Pos     max_advance; /* max horizontal advance, in 26.6 pixels */

  } FT_Size_Metrics;


The size metrics structure gives the metrics of a size object.


fields
x_ppem

The width of the scaled EM square in pixels, hence the term ‘ppem’ (pixels per EM). It is also referred to as ‘nominal width’.

y_ppem

The height of the scaled EM square in pixels, hence the term ‘ppem’ (pixels per EM). It is also referred to as ‘nominal height’.

x_scale

A 16.16 fractional scaling value used to convert horizontal metrics from font units to 26.6 fractional pixels. Only relevant for scalable font formats.

y_scale

A 16.16 fractional scaling value used to convert vertical metrics from font units to 26.6 fractional pixels. Only relevant for scalable font formats.

ascender

The ascender in 26.6 fractional pixels. See FT_FaceRec for the details.

descender

The descender in 26.6 fractional pixels. See FT_FaceRec for the details.

height

The height in 26.6 fractional pixels. See FT_FaceRec for the details.

max_advance

The maximal advance width in 26.6 fractional pixels. See FT_FaceRec for the details.

note

The scaling values, if relevant, are determined first during a size changing operation. The remaining fields are then set by the driver. For scalable formats, they are usually set to scaled values of the corresponding fields in FT_FaceRec.

Note that due to glyph hinting, these values might not be exact for certain fonts. Thus they must be treated as unreliable with an error margin of at least one pixel!

Indeed, the only way to get the exact metrics is to render all glyphs. As this would be a definite performance hit, it is up to client applications to perform such computations.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_SizeRec


  typedef struct  FT_SizeRec_
  {
    FT_Face           face;      /* parent face object              */
    FT_Generic        generic;   /* generic pointer for client uses */
    FT_Size_Metrics   metrics;   /* size metrics                    */
    FT_Size_Internal  internal;

  } FT_SizeRec;


FreeType root size class structure. A size object models a face object at a given size.


fields
face

Handle to the parent face object.

generic

A typeless pointer, which is unused by the FreeType library or any of its drivers. It can be used by client applications to link their own data to each size object.

metrics

Metrics for this size object. This field is read-only.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_SubGlyph


  typedef struct FT_SubGlyphRec_*  FT_SubGlyph;


The subglyph structure is an internal object used to describe subglyphs (for example, in the case of composites).


note

The subglyph implementation is not part of the high-level API, hence the forward structure declaration.

You can however retrieve subglyph information with FT_Get_SubGlyph_Info.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Slot_Internal


  typedef struct FT_Slot_InternalRec_*  FT_Slot_Internal;


An opaque handle to an ‘FT_Slot_InternalRec’ structure, used to model private data of a given FT_GlyphSlot object.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_GlyphSlotRec


  typedef struct  FT_GlyphSlotRec_
  {
    FT_Library        library;
    FT_Face           face;
    FT_GlyphSlot      next;
    FT_UInt           reserved;       /* retained for binary compatibility */
    FT_Generic        generic;

    FT_Glyph_Metrics  metrics;
    FT_Fixed          linearHoriAdvance;
    FT_Fixed          linearVertAdvance;
    FT_Vector         advance;

    FT_Glyph_Format   format;

    FT_Bitmap         bitmap;
    FT_Int            bitmap_left;
    FT_Int            bitmap_top;

    FT_Outline        outline;

    FT_UInt           num_subglyphs;
    FT_SubGlyph       subglyphs;

    void*             control_data;
    long              control_len;

    FT_Pos            lsb_delta;
    FT_Pos            rsb_delta;

    void*             other;

    FT_Slot_Internal  internal;

  } FT_GlyphSlotRec;


FreeType root glyph slot class structure. A glyph slot is a container where individual glyphs can be loaded, be they in outline or bitmap format.


fields
library

A handle to the FreeType library instance this slot belongs to.

face

A handle to the parent face object.

next

In some cases (like some font tools), several glyph slots per face object can be a good thing. As this is rare, the glyph slots are listed through a direct, single-linked list using its ‘next’ field.

generic

A typeless pointer which is unused by the FreeType library or any of its drivers. It can be used by client applications to link their own data to each glyph slot object.

metrics

The metrics of the last loaded glyph in the slot. The returned values depend on the last load flags (see the FT_Load_Glyph API function) and can be expressed either in 26.6 fractional pixels or font units.

Note that even when the glyph image is transformed, the metrics are not.

linearHoriAdvance

The advance width of the unhinted glyph. Its value is expressed in 16.16 fractional pixels, unless FT_LOAD_LINEAR_DESIGN is set when loading the glyph. This field can be important to perform correct WYSIWYG layout. Only relevant for outline glyphs.

linearVertAdvance

The advance height of the unhinted glyph. Its value is expressed in 16.16 fractional pixels, unless FT_LOAD_LINEAR_DESIGN is set when loading the glyph. This field can be important to perform correct WYSIWYG layout. Only relevant for outline glyphs.

advance

This is the transformed advance width for the glyph.

format

This field indicates the format of the image contained in the glyph slot. Typically FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_BITMAP, FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_OUTLINE, or FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_COMPOSITE, but others are possible.

bitmap

This field is used as a bitmap descriptor when the slot format is FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_BITMAP. Note that the address and content of the bitmap buffer can change between calls of FT_Load_Glyph and a few other functions.

bitmap_left

This is the bitmap's left bearing expressed in integer pixels. Of course, this is only valid if the format is FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_BITMAP.

bitmap_top

This is the bitmap's top bearing expressed in integer pixels. Remember that this is the distance from the baseline to the top-most glyph scanline, upwards y-coordinates being positive.

outline

The outline descriptor for the current glyph image if its format is FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_OUTLINE. Once a glyph is loaded, ‘outline’ can be transformed, distorted, embolded, etc. However, it must not be freed.

num_subglyphs

The number of subglyphs in a composite glyph. This field is only valid for the composite glyph format that should normally only be loaded with the FT_LOAD_NO_RECURSE flag. For now this is internal to FreeType.

subglyphs

An array of subglyph descriptors for composite glyphs. There are ‘num_subglyphs’ elements in there. Currently internal to FreeType.

control_data

Certain font drivers can also return the control data for a given glyph image (e.g. TrueType bytecode, Type 1 charstrings, etc.). This field is a pointer to such data.

control_len

This is the length in bytes of the control data.

other

Really wicked formats can use this pointer to present their own glyph image to client applications. Note that the application needs to know about the image format.

lsb_delta

The difference between hinted and unhinted left side bearing while autohinting is active. Zero otherwise.

rsb_delta

The difference between hinted and unhinted right side bearing while autohinting is active. Zero otherwise.

note

If FT_Load_Glyph is called with default flags (see FT_LOAD_DEFAULT) the glyph image is loaded in the glyph slot in its native format (e.g., an outline glyph for TrueType and Type 1 formats).

This image can later be converted into a bitmap by calling FT_Render_Glyph. This function finds the current renderer for the native image's format then invokes it.

The renderer is in charge of transforming the native image through the slot's face transformation fields, then convert it into a bitmap that is returned in ‘slot->bitmap’.

Note that ‘slot->bitmap_left’ and ‘slot->bitmap_top’ are also used to specify the position of the bitmap relative to the current pen position (e.g., coordinates (0,0) on the baseline). Of course, ‘slot->format’ is also changed to FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_BITMAP.

note

Here a small pseudo code fragment which shows how to use ‘lsb_delta’ and ‘rsb_delta’:

  FT_Pos  origin_x       = 0;                                      
  FT_Pos  prev_rsb_delta = 0;                                      
                                                                   
                                                                   
  for all glyphs do                                                
    <compute kern between current and previous glyph and add it to 
     `origin_x'>                                                   
                                                                   
    <load glyph with `FT_Load_Glyph'>                              
                                                                   
    if ( prev_rsb_delta - face->glyph->lsb_delta >= 32 )           
      origin_x -= 64;                                              
    else if ( prev_rsb_delta - face->glyph->lsb_delta < -32 )      
      origin_x += 64;                                              
                                                                   
    prev_rsb_delta = face->glyph->rsb_delta;                       
                                                                   
    <save glyph image, or render glyph, or ...>                    
                                                                   
    origin_x += face->glyph->advance.x;                            
  endfor                                                           

[Index] [TOC]

FT_Init_FreeType


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Init_FreeType( FT_Library  *alibrary );


Initialize a new FreeType library object. The set of modules that are registered by this function is determined at build time.


output
alibrary

A handle to a new library object.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Done_FreeType


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Done_FreeType( FT_Library  library );


Destroy a given FreeType library object and all of its childs, including resources, drivers, faces, sizes, etc.


input
library

A handle to the target library object.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_OPEN_XXX


#define FT_OPEN_MEMORY    0x1
#define FT_OPEN_STREAM    0x2
#define FT_OPEN_PATHNAME  0x4
#define FT_OPEN_DRIVER    0x8
#define FT_OPEN_PARAMS    0x10

#define ft_open_memory    FT_OPEN_MEMORY     /* deprecated */
#define ft_open_stream    FT_OPEN_STREAM     /* deprecated */
#define ft_open_pathname  FT_OPEN_PATHNAME   /* deprecated */
#define ft_open_driver    FT_OPEN_DRIVER     /* deprecated */
#define ft_open_params    FT_OPEN_PARAMS     /* deprecated */


A list of bit-field constants used within the ‘flags’ field of the FT_Open_Args structure.


values
FT_OPEN_MEMORY

This is a memory-based stream.

FT_OPEN_STREAM

Copy the stream from the ‘stream’ field.

FT_OPEN_PATHNAME

Create a new input stream from a C path name.

FT_OPEN_DRIVER

Use the ‘driver’ field.

FT_OPEN_PARAMS

Use the ‘num_params’ and ‘params’ fields.

ft_open_memory

Deprecated; use FT_OPEN_MEMORY instead.

ft_open_stream

Deprecated; use FT_OPEN_STREAM instead.

ft_open_pathname

Deprecated; use FT_OPEN_PATHNAME instead.

ft_open_driver

Deprecated; use FT_OPEN_DRIVER instead.

ft_open_params

Deprecated; use FT_OPEN_PARAMS instead.

note

The ‘FT_OPEN_MEMORY’, ‘FT_OPEN_STREAM’, and ‘FT_OPEN_PATHNAME’ flags are mutually exclusive.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Parameter


  typedef struct  FT_Parameter_
  {
    FT_ULong    tag;
    FT_Pointer  data;

  } FT_Parameter;


A simple structure used to pass more or less generic parameters to FT_Open_Face.


fields
tag

A four-byte identification tag.

data

A pointer to the parameter data.

note

The ID and function of parameters are driver-specific.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Open_Args


  typedef struct  FT_Open_Args_
  {
    FT_UInt         flags;
    const FT_Byte*  memory_base;
    FT_Long         memory_size;
    FT_String*      pathname;
    FT_Stream       stream;
    FT_Module       driver;
    FT_Int          num_params;
    FT_Parameter*   params;

  } FT_Open_Args;


A structure used to indicate how to open a new font file or stream. A pointer to such a structure can be used as a parameter for the functions FT_Open_Face and FT_Attach_Stream.


fields
flags

A set of bit flags indicating how to use the structure.

memory_base

The first byte of the file in memory.

memory_size

The size in bytes of the file in memory.

pathname

A pointer to an 8-bit file pathname.

stream

A handle to a source stream object.

driver

This field is exclusively used by FT_Open_Face; it simply specifies the font driver to use to open the face. If set to 0, FreeType tries to load the face with each one of the drivers in its list.

num_params

The number of extra parameters.

params

Extra parameters passed to the font driver when opening a new face.

note

The stream type is determined by the contents of ‘flags’ which are tested in the following order by FT_Open_Face:

If the ‘FT_OPEN_MEMORY’ bit is set, assume that this is a memory file of ‘memory_size’ bytes, located at ‘memory_address’. The data are are not copied, and the client is responsible for releasing and destroying them after the corresponding call to FT_Done_Face.

Otherwise, if the ‘FT_OPEN_STREAM’ bit is set, assume that a custom input stream ‘stream’ is used.

Otherwise, if the ‘FT_OPEN_PATHNAME’ bit is set, assume that this is a normal file and use ‘pathname’ to open it.

If the ‘FT_OPEN_DRIVER’ bit is set, FT_Open_Face only tries to open the file with the driver whose handler is in ‘driver’.

If the ‘FT_OPEN_PARAMS’ bit is set, the parameters given by ‘num_params’ and ‘params’ is used. They are ignored otherwise.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_New_Face


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_New_Face( FT_Library   library,
               const char*  filepathname,
               FT_Long      face_index,
               FT_Face     *aface );


This function calls FT_Open_Face to open a font by its pathname.


inout
library

A handle to the library resource.

input
pathname

A path to the font file.

face_index

The index of the face within the font. The first face has index 0.

output
aface

A handle to a new face object. If ‘face_index’ is greater than or equal to zero, it must be non-NULL. See FT_Open_Face for more details.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_New_Memory_Face


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_New_Memory_Face( FT_Library      library,
                      const FT_Byte*  file_base,
                      FT_Long         file_size,
                      FT_Long         face_index,
                      FT_Face        *aface );


This function calls FT_Open_Face to open a font which has been loaded into memory.


inout
library

A handle to the library resource.

input
file_base

A pointer to the beginning of the font data.

file_size

The size of the memory chunk used by the font data.

face_index

The index of the face within the font. The first face has index 0.

output
aface

A handle to a new face object. If ‘face_index’ is greater than or equal to zero, it must be non-NULL. See FT_Open_Face for more details.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Open_Face


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Open_Face( FT_Library           library,
                const FT_Open_Args*  args,
                FT_Long              face_index,
                FT_Face             *aface );


Create a face object from a given resource described by FT_Open_Args.


inout
library

A handle to the library resource.

input
args

A pointer to an ‘FT_Open_Args’ structure which must be filled by the caller.

face_index

The index of the face within the font. The first face has index 0.

output
aface

A handle to a new face object. If ‘face_index’ is greater than or equal to zero, it must be non-NULL. See note below.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

Unlike FreeType 1.x, this function automatically creates a glyph slot for the face object which can be accessed directly through ‘face->glyph’.

FT_Open_Face can be used to quickly check whether the font format of a given font resource is supported by FreeType. If the ‘face_index’ field is negative, the function's return value is 0 if the font format is recognized, or non-zero otherwise; the function returns a more or less empty face handle in ‘*aface’ (if ‘aface’ isn't NULL). The only useful field in this special case is ‘face->num_faces’ which gives the number of faces within the font file. After examination, the returned FT_Face structure should be deallocated with a call to FT_Done_Face.

Each new face object created with this function also owns a default FT_Size object, accessible as ‘face->size’.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Attach_File


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Attach_File( FT_Face      face,
                  const char*  filepathname );


This function calls FT_Attach_Stream to attach a file.


inout
face

The target face object.

input
filepathname

The pathname.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Attach_Stream


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Attach_Stream( FT_Face        face,
                    FT_Open_Args*  parameters );


‘Attach’ data to a face object. Normally, this is used to read additional information for the face object. For example, you can attach an AFM file that comes with a Type 1 font to get the kerning values and other metrics.


inout
face

The target face object.

input
parameters

A pointer to FT_Open_Args which must be filled by the caller.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

The meaning of the ‘attach’ (i.e., what really happens when the new file is read) is not fixed by FreeType itself. It really depends on the font format (and thus the font driver).

Client applications are expected to know what they are doing when invoking this function. Most drivers simply do not implement file attachments.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Done_Face


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Done_Face( FT_Face  face );


Discard a given face object, as well as all of its child slots and sizes.


input
face

A handle to a target face object.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Select_Size


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Select_Size( FT_Face  face,
                  FT_Int   strike_index );


Select a bitmap strike.


inout
face

A handle to a target face object.

input
strike_index

The index of the bitmap strike in the ‘available_sizes’ field of FT_FaceRec structure.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Size_Request_Type


  typedef enum  FT_Size_Request_Type_
  {
    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_NOMINAL,
    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_REAL_DIM,
    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_BBOX,
    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_CELL,
    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_SCALES,

    FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_MAX

  } FT_Size_Request_Type;


An enumeration type that lists the supported size request types.


values
FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_NOMINAL

The nominal size. The ‘units_per_EM’ field of FT_FaceRec is used to determine both scaling values.

FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_REAL_DIM

The real dimension. The sum of the the ‘Ascender’ and (minus of) the ‘Descender’ fields of FT_FaceRec are used to determine both scaling values.

FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_BBOX

The font bounding box. The width and height of the ‘bbox’ field of FT_FaceRec are used to determine the horizontal and vertical scaling value, respectively.

FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_CELL

The ‘max_advance_width’ field of FT_FaceRec is used to determine the horizontal scaling value; the vertical scaling value is determined the same way as FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_REAL_DIM does. Finally, both scaling values are set to the smaller one. This type is useful if you want to specify the font size for, say, a window of a given dimension and 80x24 cells.

FT_SIZE_REQUEST_TYPE_SCALES

Specify the scaling values directly.

note

The above descriptions only apply to scalable formats. For bitmap formats, the behaviour is up to the driver.

See the note section of FT_Size_Metrics if you wonder how size requesting relates to scaling values.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Size_RequestRec


  typedef struct  FT_Size_RequestRec_
  {
    FT_Size_Request_Type  type;
    FT_Long               width;
    FT_Long               height;
    FT_UInt               horiResolution;
    FT_UInt               vertResolution;

  } FT_Size_RequestRec, *FT_Size_Request;


A structure used to model a size request.


fields
type

See FT_Size_Request_Type.

width

The desired width.

height

The desired height.

horiResolution

The horizontal resolution. If set to zero, ‘width’ is treated as a 26.6 fractional pixel value.

vertResolution

The vertical resolution. If set to zero, ‘height’ is treated as a 26.6 fractional pixel value.

note

If ‘width’ is zero, then the horizontal scaling value is set equal to the vertical scaling value, and vice versa.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Request_Size


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Request_Size( FT_Face          face,
                   FT_Size_Request  req );


Resize the scale of the active FT_Size object in a face.


inout
face

A handle to a target face object.

input
req

A pointer to a FT_Size_RequestRec.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

Although drivers may select the bitmap strike matching the request, you should not rely on this if you intend to select a particular bitmap strike. Use FT_Select_Size instead in that case.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Set_Char_Size


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Set_Char_Size( FT_Face     face,
                    FT_F26Dot6  char_width,
                    FT_F26Dot6  char_height,
                    FT_UInt     horz_resolution,
                    FT_UInt     vert_resolution );


This function calls FT_Request_Size to request the nominal size (in points).


inout
face

A handle to a target face object.

input
char_width

The nominal width, in 26.6 fractional points.

char_height

The nominal height, in 26.6 fractional points.

horz_resolution

The horizontal resolution in dpi.

vert_resolution

The vertical resolution in dpi.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

If either the horizontal or vertical resolution is zero, it is set to a default value of 72dpi.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Set_Pixel_Sizes


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Set_Pixel_Sizes( FT_Face  face,
                      FT_UInt  pixel_width,
                      FT_UInt  pixel_height );


This function calls FT_Request_Size to request the nominal size (in pixels).


inout
face

A handle to the target face object.

input
pixel_width

The nominal width, in pixels.

pixel_height

The nominal height, in pixels.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Load_Glyph


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Load_Glyph( FT_Face   face,
                 FT_UInt   glyph_index,
                 FT_Int32  load_flags );


A function used to load a single glyph into the glyph slot of a face object.


inout
face

A handle to the target face object where the glyph is loaded.

input
glyph_index

The index of the glyph in the font file. For CID-keyed fonts (either in PS or in CFF format) this argument specifies the CID value.

load_flags

A flag indicating what to load for this glyph. The FT_LOAD_XXX constants can be used to control the glyph loading process (e.g., whether the outline should be scaled, whether to load bitmaps or not, whether to hint the outline, etc).

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

The loaded glyph may be transformed. See FT_Set_Transform for the details.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Load_Char


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Load_Char( FT_Face   face,
                FT_ULong  char_code,
                FT_Int32  load_flags );


A function used to load a single glyph into the glyph slot of a face object, according to its character code.


inout
face

A handle to a target face object where the glyph is loaded.

input
char_code

The glyph's character code, according to the current charmap used in the face.

load_flags

A flag indicating what to load for this glyph. The FT_LOAD_XXX constants can be used to control the glyph loading process (e.g., whether the outline should be scaled, whether to load bitmaps or not, whether to hint the outline, etc).

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

This function simply calls FT_Get_Char_Index and FT_Load_Glyph.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_LOAD_XXX


#define FT_LOAD_DEFAULT                      0x0
#define FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE                     0x1
#define FT_LOAD_NO_HINTING                   0x2
#define FT_LOAD_RENDER                       0x4
#define FT_LOAD_NO_BITMAP                    0x8
#define FT_LOAD_VERTICAL_LAYOUT              0x10
#define FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT               0x20
#define FT_LOAD_CROP_BITMAP                  0x40
#define FT_LOAD_PEDANTIC                     0x80
#define FT_LOAD_IGNORE_GLOBAL_ADVANCE_WIDTH  0x200
#define FT_LOAD_NO_RECURSE                   0x400
#define FT_LOAD_IGNORE_TRANSFORM             0x800
#define FT_LOAD_MONOCHROME                   0x1000
#define FT_LOAD_LINEAR_DESIGN                0x2000

  /* temporary hack! */
#define FT_LOAD_SBITS_ONLY                   0x4000
#define FT_LOAD_NO_AUTOHINT                  0x8000U


A list of bit-field constants used with FT_Load_Glyph to indicate what kind of operations to perform during glyph loading.


values
FT_LOAD_DEFAULT

Corresponding to 0, this value is used as the default glyph load operation. In this case, the following happens:

1. FreeType looks for a bitmap for the glyph corresponding to the face's current size. If one is found, the function returns. The bitmap data can be accessed from the glyph slot (see note below).

2. If no embedded bitmap is searched or found, FreeType looks for a scalable outline. If one is found, it is loaded from the font file, scaled to device pixels, then ‘hinted’ to the pixel grid in order to optimize it. The outline data can be accessed from the glyph slot (see note below).

Note that by default, the glyph loader doesn't render outlines into bitmaps. The following flags are used to modify this default behaviour to more specific and useful cases.

FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE

Don't scale the outline glyph loaded, but keep it in font units.

This flag implies FT_LOAD_NO_HINTING and FT_LOAD_NO_BITMAP, and unsets FT_LOAD_RENDER.

FT_LOAD_NO_HINTING

Disable hinting. This generally generates ‘blurrier’ bitmap glyph when the glyph is rendered in any of the anti-aliased modes. See also the note below.

This flag is implied by FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE.

FT_LOAD_RENDER

Call FT_Render_Glyph after the glyph is loaded. By default, the glyph is rendered in FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL mode. This can be overridden by FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX or FT_LOAD_MONOCHROME.

This flag is unset by FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE.

FT_LOAD_NO_BITMAP

Ignore bitmap strikes when loading. Bitmap-only fonts ignore this flag.

FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE always sets this flag.

FT_LOAD_VERTICAL_LAYOUT

Load the glyph for vertical text layout. Don't use it as it is problematic currently.

FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT

Indicates that the auto-hinter is preferred over the font's native hinter. See also the note below.

FT_LOAD_CROP_BITMAP

Indicates that the font driver should crop the loaded bitmap glyph (i.e., remove all space around its black bits). Not all drivers implement this.

FT_LOAD_PEDANTIC

Indicates that the font driver should perform pedantic verifications during glyph loading. This is mostly used to detect broken glyphs in fonts. By default, FreeType tries to handle broken fonts also.

FT_LOAD_IGNORE_GLOBAL_ADVANCE_WIDTH

Indicates that the font driver should ignore the global advance width defined in the font. By default, that value is used as the advance width for all glyphs when the face has FT_FACE_FLAG_FIXED_WIDTH set.

This flag exists for historical reasons (to support buggy CJK fonts).

FT_LOAD_NO_RECURSE

This flag is only used internally. It merely indicates that the font driver should not load composite glyphs recursively. Instead, it should set the ‘num_subglyph’ and ‘subglyphs’ values of the glyph slot accordingly, and set ‘glyph->format’ to FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_COMPOSITE.

The description of sub-glyphs is not available to client applications for now.

This flag implies FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE and FT_LOAD_IGNORE_TRANSFORM.

FT_LOAD_IGNORE_TRANSFORM

Indicates that the tranform matrix set by FT_Set_Transform should be ignored.

FT_LOAD_MONOCHROME

This flag is used with FT_LOAD_RENDER to indicate that you want to render an outline glyph to a 1-bit monochrome bitmap glyph, with 8 pixels packed into each byte of the bitmap data.

Note that this has no effect on the hinting algorithm used. You should use FT_LOAD_TARGET_MONO instead so that the monochrome-optimized hinting algorithm is used.

FT_LOAD_LINEAR_DESIGN

Indicates that the ‘linearHoriAdvance’ and ‘linearVertAdvance’ fields of FT_GlyphSlotRec should be kept in font units. See FT_GlyphSlotRec for details.

FT_LOAD_NO_AUTOHINT

Disable auto-hinter. See also the note below.

note

By default, hinting is enabled and the font's native hinter (see FT_FACE_FLAG_HINTER) is preferred over the auto-hinter. You can disable hinting by setting FT_LOAD_NO_HINTING or change the precedence by setting FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT. You can also set FT_LOAD_NO_AUTOHINT in case you don't want the auto-hinter to be used at all.

Besides deciding which hinter to use, you can also decide which hinting algorithm to use. See FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX for details.


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FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX


#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_( x )      ( (FT_Int32)( (x) & 15 ) << 16 )

#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_NORMAL     FT_LOAD_TARGET_( FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL )
#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_LIGHT      FT_LOAD_TARGET_( FT_RENDER_MODE_LIGHT  )
#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_MONO       FT_LOAD_TARGET_( FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO   )
#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_LCD        FT_LOAD_TARGET_( FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD    )
#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_LCD_V      FT_LOAD_TARGET_( FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD_V  )


  /*
   * @macro:
   *   FT_LOAD_TARGET_MODE
   *
   * @description:
   *   Return the @FT_Render_Mode corresponding to a given
   *   @FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX value.
   */

#define FT_LOAD_TARGET_MODE( x )  ( (FT_Render_Mode)( ( (x) >> 16 ) & 15 ) )


A list of values that are used to select a specific hinting algorithm to use by the hinter. You should OR one of these values to your ‘load_flags’ when calling FT_Load_Glyph.

Note that font's native hinters may ignore the hinting algorithm you have specified (e.g., the TrueType bytecode interpreter). You can set FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT to ensure that the auto-hinter is used.

Also note that FT_LOAD_TARGET_LIGHT is an exception, in that it always implies FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT.


values
FT_LOAD_TARGET_NORMAL

This corresponds to the default hinting algorithm, optimized for standard gray-level rendering. For monochrome output, use FT_LOAD_TARGET_MONO instead.

FT_LOAD_TARGET_LIGHT

A lighter hinting algorithm for non-monochrome modes. Many generated glyphs are more fuzzy but better resemble its original shape. A bit like rendering on Mac OS X.

As a special exception, this target implies FT_LOAD_FORCE_AUTOHINT.

FT_LOAD_TARGET_MONO

Strong hinting algorithm that should only be used for monochrome output. The result is probably unpleasant if the glyph is rendered in non-monochrome modes.

FT_LOAD_TARGET_LCD

A variant of FT_LOAD_TARGET_NORMAL optimized for horizontally decimated LCD displays.

FT_LOAD_TARGET_LCD_V

A variant of FT_LOAD_TARGET_NORMAL optimized for vertically decimated LCD displays.

note

You should use only one of the FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX values in your ‘load_flags’. They can't be ORed.

If FT_LOAD_RENDER is also set, the glyph is rendered in the corresponding mode (i.e., the mode which matches the used algorithm best) unless FT_LOAD_MONOCHROME is set.

You can use a hinting algorithm that doesn't correspond to the same rendering mode. As an example, it is possible to use the ‘light’ hinting algorithm and have the results rendered in horizontal LCD pixel mode, with code like

  FT_Load_Glyph( face, glyph_index,
                 load_flags | FT_LOAD_TARGET_LIGHT );

  FT_Render_Glyph( face->glyph, FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD );

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FT_Set_Transform


  FT_EXPORT( void )
  FT_Set_Transform( FT_Face     face,
                    FT_Matrix*  matrix,
                    FT_Vector*  delta );


A function used to set the transformation that is applied to glyph images when they are loaded into a glyph slot through FT_Load_Glyph.


inout
face

A handle to the source face object.

input
matrix

A pointer to the transformation's 2x2 matrix. Use 0 for the identity matrix.

delta

A pointer to the translation vector. Use 0 for the null vector.

note

The transformation is only applied to scalable image formats after the glyph has been loaded. It means that hinting is unaltered by the transformation and is performed on the character size given in the last call to FT_Set_Char_Size or FT_Set_Pixel_Sizes.

Note that this also transforms the ‘face.glyph.advance’ field, but not the values in ‘face.glyph.metrics’.


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FT_Render_Mode


  typedef enum  FT_Render_Mode_
  {
    FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL = 0,
    FT_RENDER_MODE_LIGHT,
    FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO,
    FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD,
    FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD_V,

    FT_RENDER_MODE_MAX

  } FT_Render_Mode;


An enumeration type that lists the render modes supported by FreeType 2. Each mode corresponds to a specific type of scanline conversion performed on the outline.

For bitmap fonts the ‘bitmap->pixel_mode’ field in the FT_GlyphSlotRec structure gives the format of the returned bitmap.


values
FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL

This is the default render mode; it corresponds to 8-bit anti-aliased bitmaps, using 256 levels of opacity.

FT_RENDER_MODE_LIGHT

This is equivalent to FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL. It is only defined as a separate value because render modes are also used indirectly to define hinting algorithm selectors. See FT_LOAD_TARGET_XXX for details.

FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO

This mode corresponds to 1-bit bitmaps.

FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD

This mode corresponds to horizontal RGB and BGR sub-pixel displays, like LCD-screens. It produces 8-bit bitmaps that are 3 times the width of the original glyph outline in pixels, and which use the FT_PIXEL_MODE_LCD mode.

FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD_V

This mode corresponds to vertical RGB and BGR sub-pixel displays (like PDA screens, rotated LCD displays, etc.). It produces 8-bit bitmaps that are 3 times the height of the original glyph outline in pixels and use the FT_PIXEL_MODE_LCD_V mode.

note

The LCD-optimized glyph bitmaps produced by FT_Render_Glyph are not filtered to reduce color-fringes. It is up to the caller to perform this pass.


[Index] [TOC]

ft_render_mode_xxx


#define ft_render_mode_normal  FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL
#define ft_render_mode_mono    FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO


These constants are deprecated. Use the corresponding FT_Render_Mode values instead.


values
ft_render_mode_normal

see FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL

ft_render_mode_mono

see FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO


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FT_Render_Glyph


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Render_Glyph( FT_GlyphSlot    slot,
                   FT_Render_Mode  render_mode );


Convert a given glyph image to a bitmap. It does so by inspecting the glyph image format, finding the relevant renderer, and invoking it.


inout
slot

A handle to the glyph slot containing the image to convert.

input
render_mode

This is the render mode used to render the glyph image into a bitmap. See FT_Render_Mode for a list of possible values.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


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FT_Kerning_Mode


  typedef enum  FT_Kerning_Mode_
  {
    FT_KERNING_DEFAULT  = 0,
    FT_KERNING_UNFITTED,
    FT_KERNING_UNSCALED

  } FT_Kerning_Mode;


An enumeration used to specify which kerning values to return in FT_Get_Kerning.


values
FT_KERNING_DEFAULT

Return scaled and grid-fitted kerning distances (value is 0).

FT_KERNING_UNFITTED

Return scaled but un-grid-fitted kerning distances.

FT_KERNING_UNSCALED

Return the kerning vector in original font units.


[Index] [TOC]

ft_kerning_default


#define ft_kerning_default   FT_KERNING_DEFAULT


This constant is deprecated. Please use FT_KERNING_DEFAULT instead.



[Index] [TOC]

ft_kerning_unfitted


#define ft_kerning_unfitted  FT_KERNING_UNFITTED


This constant is deprecated. Please use FT_KERNING_UNFITTED instead.



[Index] [TOC]

ft_kerning_unscaled


#define ft_kerning_unscaled  FT_KERNING_UNSCALED


This constant is deprecated. Please use FT_KERNING_UNSCALED instead.



[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Kerning


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Get_Kerning( FT_Face     face,
                  FT_UInt     left_glyph,
                  FT_UInt     right_glyph,
                  FT_UInt     kern_mode,
                  FT_Vector  *akerning );


Return the kerning vector between two glyphs of a same face.


input
face

A handle to a source face object.

left_glyph

The index of the left glyph in the kern pair.

right_glyph

The index of the right glyph in the kern pair.

kern_mode

See FT_Kerning_Mode for more information. Determines the scale and dimension of the returned kerning vector.

output
akerning

The kerning vector. This is either in font units or in pixels (26.6 format) for scalable formats, and in pixels for fixed-sizes formats.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

Only horizontal layouts (left-to-right & right-to-left) are supported by this method. Other layouts, or more sophisticated kernings, are out of the scope of this API function -- they can be implemented through format-specific interfaces.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Track_Kerning


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Get_Track_Kerning( FT_Face    face,
                        FT_Fixed   point_size,
                        FT_Int     degree,
                        FT_Fixed*  akerning );


Return the track kerning for a given face object at a given size.


input
face

A handle to a source face object.

point_size

The point size in 16.16 fractional points.

degree

The degree of tightness.

output
akerning

The kerning in 16.16 fractional points.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Glyph_Name


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Get_Glyph_Name( FT_Face     face,
                     FT_UInt     glyph_index,
                     FT_Pointer  buffer,
                     FT_UInt     buffer_max );


Retrieve the ASCII name of a given glyph in a face. This only works for those faces where FT_HAS_GLYPH_NAMES(face) returns TRUE.


input
face

A handle to a source face object.

glyph_index

The glyph index.

buffer_max

The maximal number of bytes available in the buffer.

output
buffer

A pointer to a target buffer where the name is copied to.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

An error is returned if the face doesn't provide glyph names or if the glyph index is invalid. In all cases of failure, the first byte of ‘buffer’ is set to 0 to indicate an empty name.

The glyph name is truncated to fit within the buffer if it is too long. The returned string is always zero-terminated.

This function is not compiled within the library if the config macro ‘FT_CONFIG_OPTION_NO_GLYPH_NAMES’ is defined in ‘include/freetype/config/ftoptions.h’.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Postscript_Name


  FT_EXPORT( const char* )
  FT_Get_Postscript_Name( FT_Face  face );


Retrieve the ASCII Postscript name of a given face, if available. This only works with Postscript and TrueType fonts.


input
face

A handle to the source face object.

return

A pointer to the face's Postscript name. NULL if unavailable.

note

The returned pointer is owned by the face and is destroyed with it.


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FT_Select_Charmap


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Select_Charmap( FT_Face      face,
                     FT_Encoding  encoding );


Select a given charmap by its encoding tag (as listed in ‘freetype.h’).


inout
face

A handle to the source face object.

input
encoding

A handle to the selected encoding.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

This function returns an error if no charmap in the face corresponds to the encoding queried here.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Set_Charmap


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Set_Charmap( FT_Face     face,
                  FT_CharMap  charmap );


Select a given charmap for character code to glyph index mapping.


inout
face

A handle to the source face object.

input
charmap

A handle to the selected charmap.

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

This function returns an error if the charmap is not part of the face (i.e., if it is not listed in the ‘face->charmaps’ table).


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Charmap_Index


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Int )
  FT_Get_Charmap_Index( FT_CharMap  charmap );


Retrieve index of a given charmap.


input
charmap

A handle to a charmap.

return

The index into the array of character maps within the face to which ‘charmap’ belongs.


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_Char_Index


  FT_EXPORT( FT_UInt )
  FT_Get_Char_Index( FT_Face   face,
                     FT_ULong  charcode );


Return the glyph index of a given character code. This function uses a charmap object to do the mapping.


input
face

A handle to the source face object.

charcode

The character code.

return

The glyph index. 0 means ‘undefined character code’.

note

If you use FreeType to manipulate the contents of font files directly, be aware that the glyph index returned by this function doesn't always correspond to the internal indices used within the file. This is done to ensure that value 0 always corresponds to the ‘missing glyph’.


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FT_Get_First_Char


  FT_EXPORT( FT_ULong )
  FT_Get_First_Char( FT_Face   face,
                     FT_UInt  *agindex );


This function is used to return the first character code in the current charmap of a given face. It also returns the corresponding glyph index.


input
face

A handle to the source face object.

output
agindex

Glyph index of first character code. 0 if charmap is empty.

return

The charmap's first character code.

note

You should use this function with FT_Get_Next_Char to be able to parse all character codes available in a given charmap. The code should look like this:

  FT_ULong  charcode;                                              
  FT_UInt   gindex;                                                
                                                                   
                                                                   
  charcode = FT_Get_First_Char( face, &gindex );                   
  while ( gindex != 0 )                                            
  {                                                                
    ... do something with (charcode,gindex) pair ...               
                                                                   
    charcode = FT_Get_Next_Char( face, charcode, &gindex );        
  }                                                                

Note that ‘*agindex’ is set to 0 if the charmap is empty. The result itself can be 0 in two cases: if the charmap is empty or when the value 0 is the first valid character code.


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FT_Get_Next_Char


  FT_EXPORT( FT_ULong )
  FT_Get_Next_Char( FT_Face    face,
                    FT_ULong   char_code,
                    FT_UInt   *agindex );


This function is used to return the next character code in the current charmap of a given face following the value ‘char_code’, as well as the corresponding glyph index.


input
face

A handle to the source face object.

char_code

The starting character code.

output
agindex

Glyph index of first character code. 0 if charmap is empty.

return

The charmap's next character code.

note

You should use this function with FT_Get_First_Char to walk over all character codes available in a given charmap. See the note for this function for a simple code example.

Note that ‘*agindex’ is set to 0 when there are no more codes in the charmap.


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FT_Get_Name_Index


  FT_EXPORT( FT_UInt )
  FT_Get_Name_Index( FT_Face     face,
                     FT_String*  glyph_name );


Return the glyph index of a given glyph name. This function uses driver specific objects to do the translation.


input
face

A handle to the source face object.

glyph_name

The glyph name.

return

The glyph index. 0 means ‘undefined character code’.


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FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_XXX


#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ARGS_ARE_WORDS          1
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ARGS_ARE_XY_VALUES      2
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ROUND_XY_TO_GRID        4
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_SCALE                   8
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_XY_SCALE             0x40
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_2X2                  0x80
#define FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_USE_MY_METRICS      0x200


A list of constants used to describe subglyphs. Please refer to the TrueType specification for the meaning of the various flags.


values
FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ARGS_ARE_WORDS

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ARGS_ARE_XY_VALUES

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_ROUND_XY_TO_GRID

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_SCALE

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_XY_SCALE

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_2X2

FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_USE_MY_METRICS


[Index] [TOC]

FT_Get_SubGlyph_Info


  FT_EXPORT( FT_Error )
  FT_Get_SubGlyph_Info( FT_GlyphSlot  glyph,
                        FT_UInt       sub_index,
                        FT_Int       *p_index,
                        FT_UInt      *p_flags,
                        FT_Int       *p_arg1,
                        FT_Int       *p_arg2,
                        FT_Matrix    *p_transform );


Retrieve a description of a given subglyph. Only use it if ‘glyph->format’ is FT_GLYPH_FORMAT_COMPOSITE, or an error is returned.


input
glyph

The source glyph slot.

sub_index

The index of subglyph. Must be less than ‘glyph->num_subglyphs’.

output
p_index

The glyph index of the subglyph.

p_flags

The subglyph flags, see FT_SUBGLYPH_FLAG_XXX.

p_arg1

The subglyph's first argument (if any).

p_arg2

The subglyph's second argument (if any).

p_transform

The subglyph transformation (if any).

return

FreeType error code. 0 means success.

note

The values of ‘*p_arg1’, ‘*p_arg2’, and ‘*p_transform’ must be interpreted depending on the flags returned in ‘*p_flags’. See the TrueType specification for details.


[Index] [TOC]