HarfBuzz text shaping engine
http://harfbuzz.github.io/
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316 lines
11 KiB
316 lines
11 KiB
<?xml version="1.0"?> |
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<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN" |
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"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd" [ |
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<!ENTITY % local.common.attrib "xmlns:xi CDATA #FIXED 'http://www.w3.org/2003/XInclude'"> |
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<!ENTITY version SYSTEM "version.xml"> |
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]> |
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<chapter id="getting-started"> |
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<title>Getting started with HarfBuzz</title> |
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<section id="an-overview-of-the-harfbuzz-shaping-api"> |
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<title>An overview of the HarfBuzz shaping API</title> |
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<para> |
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The core of the HarfBuzz shaping API is the function |
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<function>hb_shape()</function>. This function takes a font, a |
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buffer containing a string of Unicode codepoints and |
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(optionally) a list of font features as its input. It replaces |
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the codepoints in the buffer with the corresponding glyphs from |
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the font, correctly ordered and positioned, and with any of the |
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optional font features applied. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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In addition to holding the pre-shaping input (the Unicode |
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codepoints that comprise the input string) and the post-shaping |
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output (the glyphs and positions), a HarfBuzz buffer has several |
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properties that affect shaping. The most important are the |
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text-flow direction (e.g., left-to-right, right-to-left, |
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top-to-bottom, or bottom-to-top), the script tag, and the |
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language tag. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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For input string buffers, flags are available to denote when the |
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buffer represents the beginning or end of a paragraph, to |
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indicate whether or not to visibly render Unicode <literal>Default |
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Ignorable</literal> codepoints, and to modify the cluster-merging |
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behavior for the buffer. For shaped output buffers, the |
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individual X and Y offsets and <literal>advances</literal> |
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(the logical dimensions) of each glyph are |
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accessible. HarfBuzz also flags glyphs as |
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<literal>UNSAFE_TO_BREAK</literal> if breaking the string at |
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that glyph (e.g., in a line-breaking or hyphenation process) |
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would require re-shaping the text. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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HarfBuzz also provides methods to compare the contents of |
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buffers, join buffers, normalize buffer contents, and handle |
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invalid codepoints, as well as to determine the state of a |
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buffer (e.g., input codepoints or output glyphs). Buffer |
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lifecycles are managed and all buffers are reference-counted. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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Although the default <function>hb_shape()</function> function is |
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sufficient for most use cases, a variant is also provided that |
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lets you specify which of HarfBuzz's shapers to use on a buffer. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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HarfBuzz can read TrueType fonts, TrueType collections, OpenType |
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fonts, and OpenType collections. Functions are provided to query |
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font objects about metrics, Unicode coverage, available tables and |
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features, and variation selectors. Individual glyphs can also be |
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queried for metrics, variations, and glyph names. OpenType |
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variable fonts are supported, and HarfBuzz allows you to set |
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variation-axis coordinates on font objects. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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HarfBuzz provides glue code to integrate with various other |
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libraries, including FreeType, GObject, and CoreText. Support |
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for integrating with Uniscribe and DirectWrite is experimental |
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at present. |
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</para> |
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</section> |
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<section id="terminology"> |
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<title>Terminology</title> |
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<para> |
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</para> |
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<variablelist> |
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<?dbfo list-presentation="blocks"?> |
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<varlistentry> |
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<term>script</term> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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In text shaping, a <emphasis>script</emphasis> is a |
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writing system: a set of symbols, rules, and conventions |
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that is used to represent a language or multiple |
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languages. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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In general computing lingo, the word "script" can also |
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be used to mean an executable program (usually one |
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written in a human-readable programming language). For |
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the sake of clarity, HarfBuzz documents will always use |
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more specific terminology when referring to this |
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meaning, such as "Python script" or "shell script." In |
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all other instances, "script" refers to a writing system. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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For developers using HarfBuzz, it is important to note |
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the distinction between a script and a language. Most |
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scripts are used to write a variety of different |
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languages, and many languages may be written in more |
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than one script. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</varlistentry> |
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<varlistentry> |
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<term>shaper</term> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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In HarfBuzz, a <emphasis>shaper</emphasis> is a |
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handler for a specific script-shaping model. HarfBuzz |
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implements separate shapers for Indic, Arabic, Thai and |
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Lao, Khmer, Myanmar, Tibetan, Hangul, Hebrew, the |
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Universal Shaping Engine (USE), and a default shaper for |
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scripts with no script-specific shaping model. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</varlistentry> |
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<varlistentry> |
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<term>cluster</term> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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In text shaping, a <emphasis>cluster</emphasis> is a |
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sequence of codepoints that must be treated as an |
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indivisible unit. Clusters can include code-point |
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sequences that form a ligature or base-and-mark |
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sequences. Tracking and preserving clusters is important |
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when shaping operations might separate or reorder |
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code points. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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HarfBuzz provides three cluster |
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<emphasis>levels</emphasis> that implement different |
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approaches to the problem of preserving clusters during |
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shaping operations. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</varlistentry> |
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<varlistentry> |
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<term>grapheme</term> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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In linguistics, a <emphasis>grapheme</emphasis> is one |
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of the indivisible units that make up a writing system or |
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script. Often, graphemes are individual symbols (letters, |
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numbers, punctuation marks, logograms, etc.) but, |
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depending on the writing system, a particular grapheme |
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might correspond to a sequence of several Unicode code |
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points. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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In practice, HarfBuzz and other text-shaping engines |
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are not generally concerned with graphemes. However, it |
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is important for developers using HarfBuzz to recognize |
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that there is a difference between graphemes and shaping |
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clusters (see above). The two concepts may overlap |
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frequently, but there is no guarantee that they will be |
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identical. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</varlistentry> |
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<varlistentry> |
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<term>syllable</term> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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In linguistics, a <emphasis>syllable</emphasis> is an |
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a sequence of sounds that makes up a building block of a |
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particular language. Every language has its own set of |
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rules describing what constitutes a valid syllable. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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For text-shaping purposes, the various definitions of |
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"syllable" are important because script-specific shaping |
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operations may be applied at the syllable level. For |
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example, a reordering rule might specify that a vowel |
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mark be reordered to the beginning of the syllable. |
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</para> |
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<para> |
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Syllables will consist of one or more Unicode code |
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points. The definition of a syllable for a particular |
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writing system might correspond to how HarfBuzz |
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identifies clusters (see above) for the same writing |
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system. However, it is important for developers using |
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HarfBuzz to recognize that there is a difference between |
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syllables and shaping clusters. The two concepts may |
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overlap frequently, but there is no guarantee that they |
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will be identical. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</varlistentry> |
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</variablelist> |
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</section> |
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<section id="a-simple-shaping-example"> |
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<title>A simple shaping example</title> |
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<para> |
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Below is the simplest HarfBuzz shaping example possible. |
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</para> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem> |
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<para> |
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Create a buffer and put your text in it. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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#include <hb.h> |
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hb_buffer_t *buf; |
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buf = hb_buffer_create(); |
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hb_buffer_add_utf8(buf, text, -1, 0, -1); |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="2"> |
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<para> |
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Set the script, language and direction of the buffer. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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// If you know the direction, script, and language |
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hb_buffer_set_direction(buf, HB_DIRECTION_LTR); |
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hb_buffer_set_script(buf, HB_SCRIPT_LATIN); |
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hb_buffer_set_language(buf, hb_language_from_string("en", -1)); |
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// If you don't know the direction, script, and language |
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hb_buffer_guess_segment_properties(buffer); |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="3"> |
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<para> |
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Create a face and a font from a font file. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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hb_blob_t *blob = hb_blob_create_from_file(filename); /* or hb_blob_create_from_file_or_fail() */ |
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hb_face_t *face = hb_face_create(blob, 0); |
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hb_font_t *font = hb_font_create(face); |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="4"> |
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<para> |
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Shape! |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting> |
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hb_shape(font, buf, NULL, 0); |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="5"> |
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<para> |
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Get the glyph and position information. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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unsigned int glyph_count; |
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hb_glyph_info_t *glyph_info = hb_buffer_get_glyph_infos(buf, &glyph_count); |
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hb_glyph_position_t *glyph_pos = hb_buffer_get_glyph_positions(buf, &glyph_count); |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="6"> |
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<para> |
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Iterate over each glyph. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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hb_position_t cursor_x = 0; |
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hb_position_t cursor_y = 0; |
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for (unsigned int i = 0; i < glyph_count; i++) { |
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hb_codepoint_t glyphid = glyph_info[i].codepoint; |
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hb_position_t x_offset = glyph_pos[i].x_offset; |
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hb_position_t y_offset = glyph_pos[i].y_offset; |
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hb_position_t x_advance = glyph_pos[i].x_advance; |
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hb_position_t y_advance = glyph_pos[i].y_advance; |
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/* draw_glyph(glyphid, cursor_x + x_offset, cursor_y + y_offset); */ |
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cursor_x += x_advance; |
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cursor_y += y_advance; |
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} |
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</programlisting> |
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<orderedlist numeration="arabic"> |
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<listitem override="7"> |
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<para> |
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Tidy up. |
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</para> |
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</listitem> |
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</orderedlist> |
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<programlisting language="C"> |
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hb_buffer_destroy(buf); |
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hb_font_destroy(font); |
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hb_face_destroy(face); |
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hb_blob_destroy(blob); |
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</programlisting> |
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<para> |
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This example shows enough to get us started using HarfBuzz. In |
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the sections that follow, we will use the remainder of |
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HarfBuzz's API to refine and extend the example and improve its |
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text-shaping capabilities. |
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</para> |
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</section> |
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</chapter>
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