QRawFont#
The QRawFont
class provides access to a single physical instance of a font. More…
Synopsis#
Functions#
def
advancesForGlyphIndexes
(glyphIndexes, layoutFlags)def
advancesForGlyphIndexes
(glyphIndexes)def
alphaMapForGlyph
(glyphIndex[, antialiasingType=QRawFont.AntialiasingType.SubPixelAntialiasing[, transform=QTransform()]])def
ascent
()def
averageCharWidth
()def
boundingRect
(glyphIndex)def
capHeight
()def
descent
()def
familyName
()def
fontTable
(tagName)def
glyphIndexesForString
(text)def
hintingPreference
()def
isValid
()def
leading
()def
lineThickness
()def
loadFromData
(fontData, pixelSize, hintingPreference)def
loadFromFile
(fileName, pixelSize, hintingPreference)def
maxCharWidth
()def
__ne__
(other)def
__eq__
(other)def
pathForGlyph
(glyphIndex)def
pixelSize
()def
setPixelSize
(pixelSize)def
style
()def
styleName
()def
supportedWritingSystems
()def
supportsCharacter
(character)def
supportsCharacter
(ucs4)def
swap
(other)def
underlinePosition
()def
unitsPerEm
()def
weight
()def
xHeight
()
Static functions#
def
fromFont
(font[, writingSystem=QFontDatabase.Any])
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Most commonly, when presenting text in a user interface, the exact fonts used to render the characters is to some extent unknown. This can be the case for several reasons: For instance, the actual, physical fonts present on the target system could be unexpected to the developers, or the text could contain user selected styles, sizes or writing systems that are not supported by font chosen in the code.
Therefore, Qt’s QFont
class really represents a query for fonts. When text is interpreted, Qt will do its best to match the text to the query, but depending on the support, different fonts can be used behind the scenes.
For most use cases, this is both expected and necessary, as it minimizes the possibility of text in the user interface being undisplayable. In some cases, however, more direct control over the process might be useful. It is for these use cases the QRawFont
class exists.
A QRawFont
object represents a single, physical instance of a given font in a given pixel size. I.e. in the typical case it represents a set of TrueType or OpenType font tables and uses a user specified pixel size to convert metrics into logical pixel units. It can be used in combination with the QGlyphRun
class to draw specific glyph indexes at specific positions, and also have accessors to some relevant data in the physical font.
QRawFont
only provides support for the main font technologies: GDI and DirectWrite on Windows platforms, FreeType on Linux platforms and CoreText on macOS. For other font back-ends, the APIs will be disabled.
QRawFont
can be constructed in a number of ways:
It can be constructed by calling QTextLayout::glyphs() or QTextFragment::glyphs(). The returned QGlyphs objects will contain
QRawFont
objects which represent the actual fonts used to render each portion of the text.It can be constructed by passing a
QFont
object tofromFont()
. The function will return aQRawFont
object representing the font that will be selected as response to theQFont
query and the selected writing system.It can be constructed by passing a file name or QByteArray directly to the
QRawFont
constructor, or by callingloadFromFile()
orloadFromData()
. In this case, the font will not be registered inQFontDatabase
, and it will not be available as part of regular font selection.
QRawFont
is considered local to the thread in which it is constructed (either using a constructor, or by calling loadFromData()
or loadFromFile()
). The QRawFont
cannot be moved to a different thread, but will have to be recreated in the thread in question.
Note
For the requirement of caching glyph indexes and font selections for static text to avoid reshaping and relayouting in the inner loop of an application, a better choice is the QStaticText
class, since it optimizes the memory cost of the cache and also provides the possibility of paint engine specific caches for an additional speed-up.
- class PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont#
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont(fontData, pixelSize[, hintingPreference=QFont.PreferDefaultHinting])
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont(other)
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont(fileName, pixelSize[, hintingPreference=QFont.PreferDefaultHinting])
- Parameters:
hintingPreference –
HintingPreference
fontData –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
other –
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont
pixelSize – float
fileName – str
Constructs an invalid QRawFont
.
Constructs a QRawFont
representing the font contained in the supplied fontData
for the size (in pixels) given by pixelSize
, and using the hinting preference specified by hintingPreference
.
Note
The data must contain a TrueType or OpenType font.
Creates a QRawFont
which is a copy of other
.
Constructs a QRawFont
representing the font contained in the file referenced by fileName
for the size (in pixels) given by pixelSize
, and using the hinting preference specified by hintingPreference
.
Note
The referenced file must contain a TrueType or OpenType font.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.AntialiasingType#
This enum represents the different ways a glyph can be rasterized in the function alphaMapForGlyph()
.
Constant
Description
QRawFont.PixelAntialiasing
Will rasterize by measuring the coverage of the shape on whole pixels. The returned image contains the alpha values of each pixel based on the coverage of the glyph shape.
QRawFont.SubPixelAntialiasing
Will rasterize by measuring the coverage of each subpixel, returning a separate alpha value for each of the red, green and blue components of each pixel.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.LayoutFlag#
(inherits enum.Flag
) This enum tells the function advancesForGlyphIndexes()
how to calculate the advances.
Constant
Description
QRawFont.SeparateAdvances
Will calculate the advance for each glyph separately.
QRawFont.KernedAdvances
Will apply kerning between adjacent glyphs. Note that OpenType GPOS based kerning is currently not supported.
QRawFont.UseDesignMetrics
Use design metrics instead of hinted metrics adjusted to the resolution of the paint device. Can be OR-ed with any of the options above.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.advancesForGlyphIndexes(glyphIndexes, layoutFlags)#
- Parameters:
glyphIndexes – .list of quint32
layoutFlags – Combination of
QRawFont.LayoutFlag
- Return type:
.list of QPointF
Returns the QRawFont
‘s advances for each of the glyphIndexes
in pixel units. The advances give the distance from the position of a given glyph to where the next glyph should be drawn to make it appear as if the two glyphs are unspaced. How the advances are calculated is controlled by layoutFlags
.
Note
When KernedAdvances
is requested, this function will apply kerning rules from the TrueType table KERN
, if this is available in the font. In many modern fonts, kerning is handled through OpenType rules or AAT rules, which requires a full shaping step to be applied. To get the results of fully shaping the text, use QTextLayout
.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.advancesForGlyphIndexes(glyphIndexes)
- Parameters:
glyphIndexes – .list of quint32
- Return type:
.list of QPointF
This is an overloaded function.
Returns the QRawFont
‘s advances for each of the glyphIndexes
in pixel units. The advances give the distance from the position of a given glyph to where the next glyph should be drawn to make it appear as if the two glyphs are unspaced. The advance of each glyph is calculated separately.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.alphaMapForGlyph(glyphIndex[, antialiasingType=QRawFont.AntialiasingType.SubPixelAntialiasing[, transform=QTransform()]])#
- Parameters:
glyphIndex – int
antialiasingType –
AntialiasingType
transform –
PySide6.QtGui.QTransform
- Return type:
This function returns a rasterized image of the glyph at the given glyphIndex
in the underlying font, using the transform
specified. If the QRawFont
is not valid, this function will return an invalid QImage
.
If the font is a color font, then the resulting image will contain the rendered glyph at the current pixel size. In this case, the antialiasingType
will be ignored.
Otherwise, if antialiasingType
is set to SubPixelAntialiasing
, then the resulting image will be in Format_RGB32
and the RGB values of each pixel will represent the subpixel opacities of the pixel in the rasterization of the glyph. Otherwise, the image will be in the format of Format_Indexed8
and each pixel will contain the opacity of the pixel in the rasterization.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.ascent()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the ascent of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
The ascent of a font is the distance from the baseline to the highest position characters extend to. In practice, some font designers break this rule, e.g. when they put more than one accent on top of a character, or to accommodate an unusual character in an exotic language, so it is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.averageCharWidth()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the average character width of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.boundingRect(glyphIndex)#
- Parameters:
glyphIndex – int
- Return type:
Returns the smallest rectangle containing the glyph with the given glyphIndex
.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.capHeight()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the cap height of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
The cap height of a font is the height of a capital letter above the baseline. It specifically is the height of capital letters that are flat - such as H or I - as opposed to round letters such as O, or pointed letters like A, both of which may display overshoot.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.descent()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the descent of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
The descent is the distance from the base line to the lowest point characters extend to. In practice, some font designers break this rule, e.g. to accommodate an unusual character in an exotic language, so it is possible (though rare) that this value will be too small.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.familyName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the family name of this QRawFont
.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.fontTable(tagName)#
- Parameters:
tagName – str
- Return type:
Retrieves the sfnt table named tagName
from the underlying physical font, or an empty byte array if no such table was found. The returned font table’s byte order is Big Endian, like the sfnt format specifies. The tagName
must be four characters long and should be formatted in the default endianness of the current platform.
- static PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.fromFont(font[, writingSystem=QFontDatabase.Any])#
- Parameters:
font –
PySide6.QtGui.QFont
writingSystem –
WritingSystem
- Return type:
Fetches the physical representation based on a font
query. The physical font returned is the font that will be preferred by Qt in order to display text in the selected writingSystem
.
Warning
This function is potentially expensive and should not be called in performance sensitive code.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.glyphIndexesForString(text)#
- Parameters:
text – str
- Return type:
.list of quint32
Converts the string of unicode points given by text
to glyph indexes using the CMAP table in the underlying font, and returns a list containing the result.
Note that, in cases where there are other tables in the font that affect the shaping of the text, the returned glyph indexes will not correctly represent the rendering of the text. To get the correctly shaped text, you can use QTextLayout
to lay out and shape the text, then call QTextLayout::glyphs() to get the set of glyph index list and QRawFont
pairs.
See also
advancesForGlyphIndexes()
glyphIndexesForChars()
QGlyphRun
glyphRuns()
glyphRuns()
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.hintingPreference()#
- Return type:
Returns the hinting preference used to construct this QRawFont
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.isValid()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if the QRawFont
is valid and false otherwise.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.leading()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the leading of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
This is the natural inter-line spacing.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.lineThickness()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the thickness for drawing lines (underline, overline, etc.) along with text drawn in this font.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.loadFromData(fontData, pixelSize, hintingPreference)#
- Parameters:
fontData –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
pixelSize – float
hintingPreference –
HintingPreference
Replaces the current QRawFont
with the font contained in the supplied fontData
for the size (in pixels) given by pixelSize
, and using the hinting preference specified by hintingPreference
.
The fontData
must contain a TrueType or OpenType font.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.loadFromFile(fileName, pixelSize, hintingPreference)#
- Parameters:
fileName – str
pixelSize – float
hintingPreference –
HintingPreference
Replaces the current QRawFont
with the contents of the file referenced by fileName
for the size (in pixels) given by pixelSize
, and using the hinting preference specified by hintingPreference
.
The file must reference a TrueType or OpenType font.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.maxCharWidth()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the width of the widest character in the font.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.__ne__(other)#
- Parameters:
other –
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if this QRawFont
is not equal to other
. Otherwise, returns false
.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.__eq__(other)#
- Parameters:
other –
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if this QRawFont
is equal to other
. Otherwise, returns false
.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.pathForGlyph(glyphIndex)#
- Parameters:
glyphIndex – int
- Return type:
This function returns the shape of the glyph at a given glyphIndex
in the underlying font if the QRawFont
is valid. Otherwise, it returns an empty QPainterPath
.
The returned glyph will always be unhinted.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.pixelSize()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the pixel size set for this QRawFont
. The pixel size affects how glyphs are rasterized, the size of glyphs returned by pathForGlyph()
, and is used to convert internal metrics from design units to logical pixel units.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.setPixelSize(pixelSize)#
- Parameters:
pixelSize – float
Sets the pixel size with which this font should be rendered to pixelSize
.
See also
Returns the style of this QRawFont
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.styleName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the style name of this QRawFont
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.supportedWritingSystems()#
- Return type:
.list of QFontDatabase.WritingSystem
Returns a list of writing systems supported by the font according to designer supplied information in the font file. Please note that this does not guarantee support for a specific unicode point in the font. You can use the supportsCharacter()
to check support for a single, specific character.
Note
The list is determined based on the unicode ranges and codepage ranges set in the font’s OS/2 table and requires such a table to be present in the underlying font file.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.supportsCharacter(character)#
- Parameters:
character –
QChar
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if the font has a glyph that corresponds to the given character
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.supportsCharacter(ucs4)
- Parameters:
ucs4 – int
- Return type:
bool
This is an overloaded function.
Returns true
if the font has a glyph that corresponds to the UCS-4 encoded character ucs4
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.swap(other)#
- Parameters:
other –
PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont
Swaps this raw font with other
. This function is very fast and never fails.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.underlinePosition()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the position from baseline for drawing underlines below the text rendered with this font.
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.unitsPerEm()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the number of design units define the width and height of the em square for this QRawFont
. This value is used together with the pixel size when converting design metrics to pixel units, as the internal metrics are specified in design units and the pixel size gives the size of 1 em in pixels.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.weight()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the weight of this QRawFont
.
See also
- PySide6.QtGui.QRawFont.xHeight()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the xHeight of this QRawFont
in pixel units.
This is often but not always the same as the height of the character ‘x’.
See also