- class QFont#
The
QFont
class specifies a query for a font used for drawing text. More…Synopsis#
Methods#
def
__init__()
def
bold()
def
capitalization()
def
clearFeatures()
def
defaultFamily()
def
exactMatch()
def
families()
def
family()
def
featureTags()
def
featureValue()
def
fixedPitch()
def
fromString()
def
isCopyOf()
def
isFeatureSet()
def
italic()
def
kerning()
def
key()
def
legacyWeight()
def
letterSpacing()
def
__ne__()
def
__lt__()
def
__eq__()
def
overline()
def
pixelSize()
def
pointSize()
def
pointSizeF()
def
resolve()
def
resolveMask()
def
setBold()
def
setFamilies()
def
setFamily()
def
setFeature()
def
setFixedPitch()
def
setItalic()
def
setKerning()
def
setOverline()
def
setPixelSize()
def
setPointSize()
def
setPointSizeF()
def
setResolveMask()
def
setStretch()
def
setStrikeOut()
def
setStyle()
def
setStyleHint()
def
setStyleName()
def
setUnderline()
def
setWeight()
def
setWordSpacing()
def
stretch()
def
strikeOut()
def
style()
def
styleHint()
def
styleName()
def
styleStrategy()
def
swap()
def
toString()
def
underline()
def
unsetFeature()
def
weight()
def
wordSpacing()
Static functions#
def
cleanup()
def
initialize()
def
substitute()
def
substitutes()
def
substitutions()
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#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
QFont
can be regarded as a query for one or more fonts on the system.When you create a
QFont
object you specify various attributes that you want the font to have. Qt will use the font with the specified attributes, or if no matching font exists, Qt will use the closest matching installed font. The attributes of the font that is actually used are retrievable from aQFontInfo
object. If the window system provides an exact matchexactMatch()
returnstrue
. UseQFontMetricsF
to get measurements, e.g. the pixel length of a string using QFontMetrics::width().Attributes which are not specifically set will not affect the font selection algorithm, and default values will be preferred instead.
To load a specific physical font, typically represented by a single file, use
QRawFont
instead.Note that a
QGuiApplication
instance must exist before aQFont
can be used. You can set the application’s default font with QGuiApplication::setFont().If a chosen font does not include all the characters that need to be displayed,
QFont
will try to find the characters in the nearest equivalent fonts. When aQPainter
draws a character from a font theQFont
will report whether or not it has the character; if it does not,QPainter
will draw an unfilled square.Create QFonts like this:
serifFont = QFont("Times", 10, QFont.Bold) sansFont = QFont("Helvetica [Cronyx]", 12)
The attributes set in the constructor can also be set later, e.g.
setFamily()
,setPointSize()
,setPointSizeF()
,setWeight()
andsetItalic()
. The remaining attributes must be set after construction, e.g.setBold()
,setUnderline()
,setOverline()
,setStrikeOut()
andsetFixedPitch()
.QFontInfo
objects should be created after the font’s attributes have been set. AQFontInfo
object will not change, even if you change the font’s attributes. The corresponding “get” functions, e.g.family()
,pointSize()
, etc., return the values that were set, even though the values used may differ. The actual values are available from aQFontInfo
object.If the requested font family is unavailable you can influence the
font matching algorithm
by choosing a particularStyleHint
andStyleStrategy
withsetStyleHint()
. The default family (corresponding to the current style hint) is returned bydefaultFamily()
.You can provide substitutions for font family names using
insertSubstitution()
andinsertSubstitutions()
. Substitutions can be removed withremoveSubstitutions()
. Usesubstitute()
to retrieve a family’s first substitute, or the family name itself if it has no substitutes. Usesubstitutes()
to retrieve a list of a family’s substitutes (which may be empty). After substituting a font, you must trigger the updating of the font by destroying and re-creating allQFont
objects.Every
QFont
has akey()
which you can use, for example, as the key in a cache or dictionary. If you want to store a user’s font preferences you could use QSettings, writing the font information withtoString()
and reading it back withfromString()
. The operator<<() and operator>>() functions are also available, but they work on a data stream.It is possible to set the height of characters shown on the screen to a specified number of pixels with
setPixelSize()
; however usingsetPointSize()
has a similar effect and provides device independence.Loading fonts can be expensive, especially on X11.
QFont
contains extensive optimizations to make the copying ofQFont
objects fast, and to cache the results of the slow window system functions it depends upon.The font matching algorithm works as follows:
The specified font families (set by
setFamilies()
) are searched for.If not, a replacement font that supports the writing system is selected. The font matching algorithm will try to find the best match for all the properties set in the
QFont
. How this is done varies from platform to platform.If no font exists on the system that can support the text, then special “missing character” boxes will be shown in its place.
Note
If the selected font, though supporting the writing system in general, is missing glyphs for one or more specific characters, then Qt will try to find a fallback font for this or these particular characters. This feature can be disabled using
NoFontMerging
style strategy.In Windows a request for the “Courier” font is automatically changed to “Courier New”, an improved version of Courier that allows for smooth scaling. The older “Courier” bitmap font can be selected by setting the
PreferBitmap
style strategy (seesetStyleStrategy()
).Once a font is found, the remaining attributes are matched in order of priority:
pointSize()
(see below)
If you have a font which matches on family, even if none of the other attributes match, this font will be chosen in preference to a font which doesn’t match on family but which does match on the other attributes. This is because font family is the dominant search criteria.
The point size is defined to match if it is within 20% of the requested point size. When several fonts match and are only distinguished by point size, the font with the closest point size to the one requested will be chosen.
The actual family, font size, weight and other font attributes used for drawing text will depend on what’s available for the chosen family under the window system. A
QFontInfo
object can be used to determine the actual values used for drawing the text.Examples:
f = QFont("Helvetica")
If you had both an Adobe and a Cronyx Helvetica, you might get either.
f = QFont("Helvetica [Cronyx]")
You can specify the foundry you want in the family name. The font f in the above example will be set to “Helvetica [Cronyx]”.
To determine the attributes of the font actually used in the window system, use a
QFontInfo
object, e.g.info = QFontInfo(f1) family = info.family()
To find out font metrics use a
QFontMetrics
object, e.g.fm = QFontMetrics(f1) textWidthInPixels = fm.horizontalAdvance("How many pixels wide is self text?") textHeightInPixels = fm.height()
For more general information on fonts, see the comp.fonts FAQ . Information on encodings can be found from the UTR17 page.
See also
- class StyleHint#
Style hints are used by the
font matching
algorithm to find an appropriate default family if a selected font family is not available.Constant
Description
QFont.AnyStyle
leaves the font matching algorithm to choose the family. This is the default.
QFont.SansSerif
the font matcher prefer sans serif fonts.
QFont.Helvetica
is a synonym for
SansSerif
.QFont.Serif
the font matcher prefers serif fonts.
QFont.Times
is a synonym for
Serif
.QFont.TypeWriter
the font matcher prefers fixed pitch fonts.
QFont.Courier
a synonym for
TypeWriter
.QFont.OldEnglish
the font matcher prefers decorative fonts.
QFont.Decorative
is a synonym for
OldEnglish
.QFont.Monospace
the font matcher prefers fonts that map to the CSS generic font-family ‘monospace’.
QFont.Fantasy
the font matcher prefers fonts that map to the CSS generic font-family ‘fantasy’.
QFont.Cursive
the font matcher prefers fonts that map to the CSS generic font-family ‘cursive’.
QFont.System
the font matcher prefers system fonts.
- class StyleStrategy#
(inherits
enum.Flag
) The style strategy tells thefont matching
algorithm what type of fonts should be used to find an appropriate default family.The following strategies are available:
Constant
Description
QFont.PreferDefault
the default style strategy. It does not prefer any type of font.
QFont.PreferBitmap
prefers bitmap fonts (as opposed to outline fonts).
QFont.PreferDevice
prefers device fonts.
QFont.PreferOutline
prefers outline fonts (as opposed to bitmap fonts).
QFont.ForceOutline
forces the use of outline fonts.
QFont.NoAntialias
don’t antialias the fonts.
QFont.NoSubpixelAntialias
avoid subpixel antialiasing on the fonts if possible.
QFont.PreferAntialias
antialias if possible.
QFont.NoFontMerging
If the font selected for a certain writing system does not contain a character requested to draw, then Qt automatically chooses a similar looking font that contains the character. The NoFontMerging flag disables this feature. Please note that enabling this flag will not prevent Qt from automatically picking a suitable font when the selected font does not support the writing system of the text.
QFont.PreferNoShaping
Sometimes, a font will apply complex rules to a set of characters in order to display them correctly. In some writing systems, such as Brahmic scripts, this is required in order for the text to be legible, but in e.g. Latin script, it is merely a cosmetic feature. The PreferNoShaping flag will disable all such features when they are not required, which will improve performance in most cases (since Qt 5.10).
Any of these may be OR-ed with one of these flags:
Constant
Description
QFont.PreferMatch
prefer an exact match. The font matcher will try to use the exact font size that has been specified.
QFont.PreferQuality
prefer the best quality font. The font matcher will use the nearest standard point size that the font supports.
- class HintingPreference#
This enum describes the different levels of hinting that can be applied to glyphs to improve legibility on displays where it might be warranted by the density of pixels.
Constant
Description
QFont.PreferDefaultHinting
Use the default hinting level for the target platform.
QFont.PreferNoHinting
If possible, render text without hinting the outlines of the glyphs. The text layout will be typographically accurate and scalable, using the same metrics as are used e.g. when printing.
QFont.PreferVerticalHinting
If possible, render text with no horizontal hinting, but align glyphs to the pixel grid in the vertical direction. The text will appear crisper on displays where the density is too low to give an accurate rendering of the glyphs. But since the horizontal metrics of the glyphs are unhinted, the text’s layout will be scalable to higher density devices (such as printers) without impacting details such as line breaks.
QFont.PreferFullHinting
If possible, render text with hinting in both horizontal and vertical directions. The text will be altered to optimize legibility on the target device, but since the metrics will depend on the target size of the text, the positions of glyphs, line breaks, and other typographical detail will not scale, meaning that a text layout may look different on devices with different pixel densities.
Please note that this enum only describes a preference, as the full range of hinting levels are not supported on all of Qt’s supported platforms. The following table details the effect of a given hinting preference on a selected set of target platforms.
PreferDefaultHinting
PreferNoHinting
PreferVerticalHinting
PreferFullHinting
Windows and DirectWrite enabled in Qt
Full hinting
Vertical hinting
Vertical hinting
Full hinting
FreeType
Operating System setting
No hinting
Vertical hinting (light)
Full hinting
Cocoa on macOS
No hinting
No hinting
No hinting
No hinting
New in version 4.8.
- class Weight#
(inherits
enum.IntEnum
) Qt uses a weighting scale from 1 to 1000 compatible with OpenType. A weight of 1 will be thin, whilst 1000 will be extremely black.This enum contains the predefined font weights:
Constant
Description
QFont.Thin
100
QFont.ExtraLight
200
QFont.Light
300
QFont.Normal
400
QFont.Medium
500
QFont.DemiBold
600
QFont.Bold
700
QFont.ExtraBold
800
QFont.Black
900
- class Style#
This enum describes the different styles of glyphs that are used to display text.
Constant
Description
QFont.StyleNormal
Normal glyphs used in unstyled text.
QFont.StyleItalic
Italic glyphs that are specifically designed for the purpose of representing italicized text.
QFont.StyleOblique
Glyphs with an italic appearance that are typically based on the unstyled glyphs, but are not fine-tuned for the purpose of representing italicized text.
See also
- class Stretch#
(inherits
enum.IntEnum
) Predefined stretch values that follow the CSS naming convention. The higher the value, the more stretched the text is.Constant
Description
QFont.AnyStretch
0 Accept any stretch matched using the other
QFont
properties (added in Qt 5.8)QFont.UltraCondensed
50
QFont.ExtraCondensed
62
QFont.Condensed
75
QFont.SemiCondensed
87
QFont.Unstretched
100
QFont.SemiExpanded
112
QFont.Expanded
125
QFont.ExtraExpanded
150
QFont.UltraExpanded
200
See also
- class Capitalization#
Rendering option for text this font applies to.
Constant
Description
QFont.MixedCase
This is the normal text rendering option where no capitalization change is applied.
QFont.AllUppercase
This alters the text to be rendered in all uppercase type.
QFont.AllLowercase
This alters the text to be rendered in all lowercase type.
QFont.SmallCaps
This alters the text to be rendered in small-caps type.
QFont.Capitalize
This alters the text to be rendered with the first character of each word as an uppercase character.
- class SpacingType#
Constant
Description
QFont.PercentageSpacing
A value of 100 will keep the spacing unchanged; a value of 200 will enlarge the spacing after a character by the width of the character itself.
QFont.AbsoluteSpacing
A positive value increases the letter spacing by the corresponding pixels; a negative value decreases the spacing.
Constructs a font that is a copy of
font
.- __init__()
Constructs a font object that uses the application’s default font.
See also
font()
- __init__(families[, pointSize=-1[, weight=-1[, italic=false]]])
- Parameters:
families – list of strings
pointSize – int
weight – int
italic – bool
Constructs a font object with the specified
families
,pointSize
,weight
anditalic
settings.If
pointSize
is zero or negative, the point size of the font is set to a system-dependent default value. Generally, this is 12 points.Each family name entry in
families
may optionally also include a foundry name, e.g. “Helvetica [Cronyx]”. If the family is available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn’t specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn’t available a family will be set using thefont matching
algorithm.- __init__(font, pd)
- Parameters:
font –
QFont
pd –
QPaintDevice
Constructs a font from
font
for use on the paint devicepd
.- __init__(family[, pointSize=-1[, weight=-1[, italic=false]]])
- Parameters:
family – str
pointSize – int
weight – int
italic – bool
Constructs a font object with the specified
family
,pointSize
,weight
anditalic
settings.If
pointSize
is zero or negative, the point size of the font is set to a system-dependent default value. Generally, this is 12 points.The
family
name may optionally also include a foundry name, e.g. “Helvetica [Cronyx]”. If thefamily
is available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn’t specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn’t available a family will be set using thefont matching
algorithm.This will split the family string on a comma and call
setFamilies()
with the resulting list. To preserve a font that uses a comma in its name, use the constructor that takes a QStringList.- bold()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
ifweight()
is a value greater thanMedium
; otherwise returnsfalse
.- static cacheStatistics()#
- capitalization()#
- Return type:
Returns the current capitalization type of the font.
See also
- static cleanup()#
- clearFeatures()#
Clears any previously set features on the
QFont
.See
setFeature()
for more details on font features.See also
Tag
setFeature()
unsetFeature()
featureTags()
featureValue()
- clearVariableAxes()#
Clears any previously set variable axis values on the
QFont
.See
setVariableAxis()
for more details on variable axes.- defaultFamily()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the family name that corresponds to the current style hint.
See also
- exactMatch()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if a window system font exactly matching the settings of this font is available.See also
- families()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns the requested font family names, i.e. the names set in the last
setFamilies()
call or via the constructor. Otherwise it returns an empty list.- family()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the requested font family name. This will always be the same as the first entry in the
families()
call.- featureTags()#
- Return type:
.list of QFont.Tag
Returns a list of tags for all font features currently set on this
QFont
.See
setFeature()
for more details on font features.See also
Tag
setFeature()
unsetFeature()
isFeatureSet()
clearFeatures()
- featureValue(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
- Return type:
int
Returns the value set for a specific feature
tag
. If the tag has not been set, 0 will be returned instead.See
setFeature()
for more details on font features.See also
Tag
setFeature()
unsetFeature()
featureTags()
isFeatureSet()
- fixedPitch()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if fixed pitch has been set; otherwise returnsfalse
.See also
- fromString(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
- Return type:
bool
Sets this font to match the description
descrip
. The description is a comma-separated list of the font attributes, as returned bytoString()
.See also
- hintingPreference()#
- Return type:
Returns the currently preferred hinting level for glyphs rendered with this font.
See also
- static initialize()#
- static insertSubstitution(arg__1, arg__2)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
arg__2 – str
Inserts
substituteName
into the substitution table for the familyfamilyName
.After substituting a font, trigger the updating of the font by destroying and re-creating all
QFont
objects.- static insertSubstitutions(arg__1, arg__2)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
arg__2 – list of strings
Inserts the list of families
substituteNames
into the substitution list forfamilyName
.After substituting a font, trigger the updating of the font by destroying and re-creating all
QFont
objects.Returns
true
if this font andf
are copies of each other, i.e. one of them was created as a copy of the other and neither has been modified since. This is much stricter than equality.See also
operator=()
operator==()
- isFeatureSet(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
- Return type:
bool
Returns true if a value for the feature given by
tag
has been set on theQFont
, otherwise returns false.See
setFeature()
for more details on font features.See also
Tag
setFeature()
unsetFeature()
featureTags()
featureValue()
- isVariableAxisSet(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
- Return type:
bool
Returns true if a value for the variable axis given by
tag
has been set on theQFont
, otherwise returns false.See
setVariableAxis()
for more details on font variable axes.- italic()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if thestyle()
of the font is notStyleNormal
See also
- kerning()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if kerning should be used when drawing text with this font.See also
- key()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the font’s key, a textual representation of a font. It is typically used as the key for a cache or dictionary of fonts.
See also
QMap
- legacyWeight()#
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
weight()
instead.Returns the weight of the font converted to the non-standard font weight scale used in Qt 5 and earlier versions.
Since Qt 6, the OpenType standard’s font weight scale is used instead of a non-standard scale. This requires conversion from values that use the old scale. For convenience, this function may be used when porting from code which uses the old weight scale.
See also
- letterSpacing()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the letter spacing for the font.
- letterSpacingType()#
- Return type:
Returns the spacing type used for letter spacing.
Returns
true
if this font is different fromf
; otherwise returnsfalse
.Two QFonts are considered to be different if their font attributes are different.
See also
operator==()
Provides an arbitrary comparison of this font and font
f
. All that is guaranteed is that the operator returnsfalse
if both fonts are equal and that (f1 < f2) == !(f2 < f1) if the fonts are not equal.This function is useful in some circumstances, for example if you want to use
QFont
objects as keys in a QMap.See also
operator==()
operator!=()
isCopyOf()
Returns
true
if this font is equal tof
; otherwise returns false.Two QFonts are considered equal if their font attributes are equal.
See also
operator!=()
isCopyOf()
- overline()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if overline has been set; otherwise returnsfalse
.See also
- pixelSize()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the pixel size of the font if it was set with
setPixelSize()
. Returns -1 if the size was set withsetPointSize()
orsetPointSizeF()
.See also
- pointSize()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the point size of the font. Returns -1 if the font size was specified in pixels.
See also
- pointSizeF()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the point size of the font. Returns -1 if the font size was specified in pixels.
- static removeSubstitutions(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
Removes all the substitutions for
familyName
.Returns a new
QFont
that has attributes copied fromother
that have not been previously set on this font.- resolveMask()#
- Return type:
int
- setBold(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
If
enable
is true sets the font’s weight toBold
; otherwise sets the weight toNormal
.For finer boldness control use
setWeight()
.Note
If
styleName()
is set, this value may be ignored, or if supported on the platform, the font artificially embolded.See also
- setCapitalization(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 –
Capitalization
Sets the capitalization of the text in this font to
caps
.A font’s capitalization makes the text appear in the selected capitalization mode.
See also
- setFamilies(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – list of strings
Sets the list of family names for the font. The names are case insensitive and may include a foundry name. The first family in
families
will be set as the main family for the font.Each family name entry in
families
may optionally also include a foundry name, e.g. “Helvetica [Cronyx]”. If the family is available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn’t specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn’t available a family will be set using thefont matching
algorithm.See also
- setFamily(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
Sets the family name of the font. The name is case insensitive and may include a foundry name.
The
family
name may optionally also include a foundry name, e.g. “Helvetica [Cronyx]”. If thefamily
is available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn’t specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn’t available a family will be set using thefont matching
algorithm.- setFeature(tag, value)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
value – int
This is an overloaded function.
Applies an integer value to the typographical feature specified by
tag
when shaping the text. This provides advanced access to the font shaping process, and can be used to support font features that are otherwise not covered in the API.The feature is specified by a
tag
, which is typically encoded from the four-character feature name in the font feature map.This integer
value
passed along with the tag in most cases represents a boolean value: A zero value means the feature is disabled, and a non-zero value means it is enabled. For certain font features, however, it may have other interpretations. For example, when applied to thesalt
feature, the value is an index that specifies the stylistic alternative to use.For example, the
frac
font feature will convert diagonal fractions separated with a slash (such as1/2
) with a different representation. Typically this will involve baking the full fraction into a single character width (such as½
).If a font supports the
frac
feature, then it can be enabled in the shaper by settingfeatures["frac"] = 1
in the font feature map.Note
By default, Qt will enable and disable certain font features based on other font properties. In particular, the
kern
feature will be enabled/disabled depending on thekerning()
property of theQFont
. In addition, all ligature features (liga
,clig
,dlig
,hlig
) will be disabled if aletterSpacing()
is applied, but only for writing systems where the use of ligature is cosmetic. For writing systems where ligatures are required, the features will remain in their default state. The values set using setFeature() and related functions will override the default behavior. If, for instance, the feature “kern” is set to 1, then kerning will always be enabled, regardless of whether the kerning property is set to false. Similarly, if it is set to 0, then it will always be disabled. To reset a font feature to its default behavior, you can unset it usingunsetFeature()
.See also
- setFixedPitch(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
If
enable
is true, sets fixed pitch on; otherwise sets fixed pitch off.See also
- setHintingPreference(hintingPreference)#
- Parameters:
hintingPreference –
HintingPreference
Set the preference for the hinting level of the glyphs to
hintingPreference
. This is a hint to the underlying font rendering system to use a certain level of hinting, and has varying support across platforms. See the table in the documentation forHintingPreference
for more details.The default hinting preference is
PreferDefaultHinting
.See also
- setItalic(b)#
- Parameters:
b – bool
Sets the
style()
of the font toStyleItalic
ifenable
is true; otherwise the style is set toStyleNormal
.Note
If
styleName()
is set, this value may be ignored, or if supported on the platform, the font may be rendered tilted instead of picking a designed italic font-variant.- setKerning(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
Enables kerning for this font if
enable
is true; otherwise disables it. By default, kerning is enabled.When kerning is enabled, glyph metrics do not add up anymore, even for Latin text. In other words, the assumption that width(‘a’) + width(‘b’) is equal to width(“ab”) is not necessarily true.
See also
- setLegacyWeight(legacyWeight)#
- Parameters:
legacyWeight – int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
setWeight()
instead.Sets the weight of the font to
legacyWeight
using the legacy font weight scale of Qt 5 and previous versions.Since Qt 6, the OpenType standard’s font weight scale is used instead of a non-standard scale. This requires conversion from values that use the old scale. For convenience, this function may be used when porting from code which uses the old weight scale.
- setLetterSpacing(type, spacing)#
- Parameters:
type –
SpacingType
spacing – float
Sets the letter spacing for the font to
spacing
and the type of spacing totype
.Letter spacing changes the default spacing between individual letters in the font. The spacing between the letters can be made smaller as well as larger either in percentage of the character width or in pixels, depending on the selected spacing type.
- setOverline(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
If
enable
is true, sets overline on; otherwise sets overline off.See also
- setPixelSize(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – int
Sets the font size to
pixelSize
pixels, with a maxiumum size of an unsigned 16-bit integer.Using this function makes the font device dependent. Use
setPointSize()
orsetPointSizeF()
to set the size of the font in a device independent manner.See also
- setPointSize(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – int
Sets the point size to
pointSize
. The point size must be greater than zero.See also
- setPointSizeF(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – float
Sets the point size to
pointSize
. The point size must be greater than zero. The requested precision may not be achieved on all platforms.See also
- setResolveMask(mask)#
- Parameters:
mask – int
- setStretch(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – int
Sets the stretch factor for the font.
The stretch factor matches a condensed or expanded version of the font or applies a stretch transform that changes the width of all characters in the font by
factor
percent. For example, settingfactor
to 150 results in all characters in the font being 1.5 times (ie. 150%) wider. The minimum stretch factor is 1, and the maximum stretch factor is 4000. The default stretch factor isAnyStretch
, which will accept any stretch factor and not apply any transform on the font.The stretch factor is only applied to outline fonts. The stretch factor is ignored for bitmap fonts.
Note
When matching a font with a native non-default stretch factor, requesting a stretch of 100 will stretch it back to a medium width font.
- setStrikeOut(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
If
enable
is true, sets strikeout on; otherwise sets strikeout off.See also
Sets the style of the font to
style
.- setStyleHint(arg__1[, strategy=QFont.StyleStrategy.PreferDefault])#
- Parameters:
arg__1 –
StyleHint
strategy –
StyleStrategy
Sets the style hint and strategy to
hint
andstrategy
, respectively.If these aren’t set explicitly the style hint will default to
AnyStyle
and the style strategy toPreferDefault
.Qt does not support style hints on X11 since this information is not provided by the window system.
- setStyleName(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
Sets the style name of the font to
styleName
. When set, other style properties likestyle()
andweight()
will be ignored for font matching, though they may be simulated afterwards if supported by the platform’s font engine.Due to the lower quality of artificially simulated styles, and the lack of full cross platform support, it is not recommended to use matching by style name together with matching by style properties
See also
- setStyleStrategy(s)#
- Parameters:
s –
StyleStrategy
Sets the style strategy for the font to
s
.See also
- setUnderline(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – bool
If
enable
is true, sets underline on; otherwise sets underline off.See also
- setVariableAxis(tag, value)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
value – float
Applies a
value
to the variable axis corresponding totag
.Variable fonts provide a way to store multiple variations (with different weights, widths or styles) in the same font file. The variations are given as floating point values for a pre-defined set of parameters, called “variable axes”. Specific instances are typically given names by the font designer, and, in Qt, these can be selected using
setStyleName()
just like traditional sub-families.In some cases, it is also useful to provide arbitrary values for the different axes. For instance, if a font has a Regular and Bold sub-family, you may want a weight in-between these. You could then manually request this by supplying a custom value for the “wght” axis in the font.
QFont font; font.setVariableAxis("wght", (QFont::Normal + QFont::Bold) / 2.0f);
If the “wght” axis is supported by the font and the given value is within its defined range, a font corresponding to the weight 550.0 will be provided.
There are a few standard axes than many fonts provide, such as “wght” (weight), “wdth” (width), “ital” (italic) and “opsz” (optical size). They each have indivdual ranges defined in the font itself. For instance, “wght” may span from 100 to 900 (
Thin
toBlack
) whereas “ital” can span from 0 to 1 (from not italic to fully italic).A font may also choose to define custom axes; the only limitation is that the name has to meet the requirements for a
Tag
(sequence of four latin-1 characters.)By default, no variable axes are set.
Note
In order to use variable axes on Windows, the application has to run with either the FreeType or DirectWrite font databases. See the documentation for
QGuiApplication()
for more information on how to select these technologies.See also
Sets the weight of the font to
weight
, using the scale defined byWeight
enumeration.Note
If
styleName()
is set, this value may be ignored for font selection.- setWordSpacing(spacing)#
- Parameters:
spacing – float
Sets the word spacing for the font to
spacing
.Word spacing changes the default spacing between individual words. A positive value increases the word spacing by a corresponding amount of pixels, while a negative value decreases the inter-word spacing accordingly.
Word spacing will not apply to writing systems, where indiviaul words are not separated by white space.
See also
- stretch()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the stretch factor for the font.
See also
- strikeOut()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if strikeout has been set; otherwise returnsfalse
.See also
Returns the style of the font.
See also
Returns the
StyleHint
.The style hint affects the
font matching algorithm
. SeeStyleHint
for the list of available hints.See also
- styleName()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the requested font style name. This can be used to match the font with irregular styles (that can’t be normalized in other style properties).
See also
- styleStrategy()#
- Return type:
Returns the
StyleStrategy
.The style strategy affects the
font matching
algorithm. SeeStyleStrategy
for the list of available strategies.See also
- static substitute(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
- Return type:
str
Returns the first family name to be used whenever
familyName
is specified. The lookup is case insensitive.If there is no substitution for
familyName
,familyName
is returned.To obtain a list of substitutions use
substitutes()
.- static substitutes(arg__1)#
- Parameters:
arg__1 – str
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a list of family names to be used whenever
familyName
is specified. The lookup is case insensitive.If there is no substitution for
familyName
, an empty list is returned.- static substitutions()#
- Return type:
list of strings
Returns a sorted list of substituted family names.
Swaps this font instance with
other
. This function is very fast and never fails.- toString()#
- Return type:
str
Returns a description of the font. The description is a comma-separated list of the attributes, perfectly suited for use in QSettings, and consists of the following:
Font family
Point size
Pixel size
Style hint
Font weight
Font style
Underline
Strike out
Fixed pitch
Always 0
Capitalization
Letter spacing
Word spacing
Stretch
Style strategy
Font style (omitted when unavailable)
See also
- underline()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns
true
if underline has been set; otherwise returnsfalse
.See also
- unsetFeature(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
This is an overloaded function.
Unsets the
tag
from the map of explicitly enabled/disabled features.Note
Even if the feature has not previously been added, this will mark the font features map as modified in this
QFont
, so that it will take precedence when resolving against other fonts.Unsetting an existing feature on the
QFont
reverts behavior to the default.See
setFeature()
for more details on font features.See also
Tag
clearFeatures()
setFeature()
featureTags()
featureValue()
- unsetVariableAxis(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
Unsets a previously set variable axis value given by
tag
.Note
If no value has previously been given for this tag, the
QFont
will still consider its variable axes as set when resolving against otherQFont
values.See also
- variableAxisTags()#
- Return type:
.list of QFont.Tag
Returns a list of tags for all variable axes currently set on this
QFont
.See
setVariableAxis()
for more details on variable axes.- variableAxisValue(tag)#
- Parameters:
tag –
Tag
- Return type:
float
Returns the value set for a specific variable axis
tag
. If the tag has not been set, 0.0 will be returned instead.See
setVariableAxis()
for more details on variable axes.Returns the weight of the font, using the same scale as the
Weight
enumeration.See also
- wordSpacing()#
- Return type:
float
Returns the word spacing for the font.
See also