FreeType » Docs » Support API » Glyph Stroker
Glyph Stroker¶
Synopsis¶
This component generates stroked outlines of a given vectorial glyph. It also allows you to retrieve the ‘outside’ and/or the ‘inside’ borders of the stroke.
This can be useful to generate ‘bordered’ glyph, i.e., glyphs displayed with a coloured (and anti-aliased) border around their shape.
FT_Stroker¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
typedef struct FT_StrokerRec_* FT_Stroker;
Opaque handle to a path stroker object.
FT_Stroker_LineJoin¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
typedef enum FT_Stroker_LineJoin_ { FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_ROUND = 0, FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_BEVEL = 1, FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE = 2, FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER = FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE, FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_FIXED = 3 } FT_Stroker_LineJoin;
These values determine how two joining lines are rendered in a stroker.
values
FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_ROUND |
Used to render rounded line joins. Circular arcs are used to join two lines smoothly. |
FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_BEVEL |
Used to render beveled line joins. The outer corner of the joined lines is filled by enclosing the triangular region of the corner with a straight line between the outer corners of each stroke. |
FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_FIXED |
Used to render mitered line joins, with fixed bevels if the miter limit is exceeded. The outer edges of the strokes for the two segments are extended until they meet at an angle. If the segments meet at too sharp an angle (such that the miter would extend from the intersection of the segments a distance greater than the product of the miter limit value and the border radius), then a bevel join (see above) is used instead. This prevents long spikes being created. FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_FIXED generates a miter line join as used in PostScript and PDF. |
FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE | |
FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER |
Used to render mitered line joins, with variable bevels if the miter limit is exceeded. The intersection of the strokes is clipped at a line perpendicular to the bisector of the angle between the strokes, at the distance from the intersection of the segments equal to the product of the miter limit value and the border radius. This prevents long spikes being created. FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE generates a mitered line join as used in XPS. FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER is an alias for FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE, retained for backward compatibility. |
FT_Stroker_LineCap¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
typedef enum FT_Stroker_LineCap_ { FT_STROKER_LINECAP_BUTT = 0, FT_STROKER_LINECAP_ROUND, FT_STROKER_LINECAP_SQUARE } FT_Stroker_LineCap;
These values determine how the end of opened sub-paths are rendered in a stroke.
values
FT_STROKER_LINECAP_BUTT |
The end of lines is rendered as a full stop on the last point itself. |
FT_STROKER_LINECAP_ROUND |
The end of lines is rendered as a half-circle around the last point. |
FT_STROKER_LINECAP_SQUARE |
The end of lines is rendered as a square around the last point. |
FT_StrokerBorder¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
typedef enum FT_StrokerBorder_ { FT_STROKER_BORDER_LEFT = 0, FT_STROKER_BORDER_RIGHT } FT_StrokerBorder;
These values are used to select a given stroke border in FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts
and FT_Stroker_ExportBorder
.
values
FT_STROKER_BORDER_LEFT |
Select the left border, relative to the drawing direction. |
FT_STROKER_BORDER_RIGHT |
Select the right border, relative to the drawing direction. |
note
Applications are generally interested in the ‘inside’ and ‘outside’ borders. However, there is no direct mapping between these and the ‘left’ and ‘right’ ones, since this really depends on the glyph's drawing orientation, which varies between font formats.
You can however use FT_Outline_GetInsideBorder
and FT_Outline_GetOutsideBorder
to get these.
FT_Outline_GetInsideBorder¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_StrokerBorder ) FT_Outline_GetInsideBorder( FT_Outline* outline );
Retrieve the FT_StrokerBorder
value corresponding to the ‘inside’ borders of a given outline.
input
outline |
The source outline handle. |
return
The border index. FT_STROKER_BORDER_RIGHT
for empty or invalid outlines.
FT_Outline_GetOutsideBorder¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_StrokerBorder ) FT_Outline_GetOutsideBorder( FT_Outline* outline );
Retrieve the FT_StrokerBorder
value corresponding to the ‘outside’ borders of a given outline.
input
outline |
The source outline handle. |
return
The border index. FT_STROKER_BORDER_LEFT
for empty or invalid outlines.
FT_Glyph_Stroke¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Glyph_Stroke( FT_Glyph *pglyph, FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Bool destroy );
Stroke a given outline glyph object with a given stroker.
inout
pglyph |
Source glyph handle on input, new glyph handle on output. |
input
stroker |
A stroker handle. |
destroy |
A Boolean. If 1, the source glyph object is destroyed on success. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
The source glyph is untouched in case of error.
Adding stroke may yield a significantly wider and taller glyph depending on how large of a radius was used to stroke the glyph. You may need to manually adjust horizontal and vertical advance amounts to account for this added size.
FT_Glyph_StrokeBorder¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Glyph_StrokeBorder( FT_Glyph *pglyph, FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Bool inside, FT_Bool destroy );
Stroke a given outline glyph object with a given stroker, but only return either its inside or outside border.
inout
pglyph |
Source glyph handle on input, new glyph handle on output. |
input
stroker |
A stroker handle. |
inside |
A Boolean. If 1, return the inside border, otherwise the outside border. |
destroy |
A Boolean. If 1, the source glyph object is destroyed on success. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
The source glyph is untouched in case of error.
Adding stroke may yield a significantly wider and taller glyph depending on how large of a radius was used to stroke the glyph. You may need to manually adjust horizontal and vertical advance amounts to account for this added size.
FT_Stroker_New¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_New( FT_Library library, FT_Stroker *astroker );
Create a new stroker object.
input
library |
FreeType library handle. |
output
astroker |
A new stroker object handle. NULL in case of error. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
FT_Stroker_Set¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( void ) FT_Stroker_Set( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Fixed radius, FT_Stroker_LineCap line_cap, FT_Stroker_LineJoin line_join, FT_Fixed miter_limit );
Reset a stroker object's attributes.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
radius |
The border radius. |
line_cap |
The line cap style. |
line_join |
The line join style. |
miter_limit |
The miter limit for the FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_FIXED and FT_STROKER_LINEJOIN_MITER_VARIABLE line join styles, expressed as 16.16 fixed-point value. |
note
The radius is expressed in the same units as the outline coordinates.
This function calls FT_Stroker_Rewind
automatically.
FT_Stroker_Rewind¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( void ) FT_Stroker_Rewind( FT_Stroker stroker );
Reset a stroker object without changing its attributes. You should call this function before beginning a new series of calls to FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath
or FT_Stroker_EndSubPath
.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
FT_Stroker_ParseOutline¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_ParseOutline( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Outline* outline, FT_Bool opened );
A convenience function used to parse a whole outline with the stroker. The resulting outline(s) can be retrieved later by functions like FT_Stroker_GetCounts
and FT_Stroker_Export
.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
outline |
The source outline. |
opened |
A boolean. If 1, the outline is treated as an open path instead of a closed one. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
If ‘opened’ is 0 (the default), the outline is treated as a closed path, and the stroker generates two distinct ‘border’ outlines.
If ‘opened’ is 1, the outline is processed as an open path, and the stroker generates a single ‘stroke’ outline.
This function calls FT_Stroker_Rewind
automatically.
FT_Stroker_Done¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( void ) FT_Stroker_Done( FT_Stroker stroker );
Destroy a stroker object.
input
stroker |
A stroker handle. Can be NULL. |
FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Vector* to, FT_Bool open );
Start a new sub-path in the stroker.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
to |
A pointer to the start vector. |
open |
A boolean. If 1, the sub-path is treated as an open one. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
This function is useful when you need to stroke a path that is not stored as an FT_Outline
object.
FT_Stroker_EndSubPath¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_EndSubPath( FT_Stroker stroker );
Close the current sub-path in the stroker.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
You should call this function after FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath
. If the subpath was not ‘opened’, this function ‘draws’ a single line segment to the start position when needed.
FT_Stroker_LineTo¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_LineTo( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Vector* to );
‘Draw’ a single line segment in the stroker's current sub-path, from the last position.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
to |
A pointer to the destination point. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
You should call this function between FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath
and FT_Stroker_EndSubPath
.
FT_Stroker_ConicTo¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_ConicTo( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Vector* control, FT_Vector* to );
‘Draw’ a single quadratic Bezier in the stroker's current sub-path, from the last position.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
control |
A pointer to a Bezier control point. |
to |
A pointer to the destination point. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
You should call this function between FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath
and FT_Stroker_EndSubPath
.
FT_Stroker_CubicTo¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_CubicTo( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Vector* control1, FT_Vector* control2, FT_Vector* to );
‘Draw’ a single cubic Bezier in the stroker's current sub-path, from the last position.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
control1 |
A pointer to the first Bezier control point. |
control2 |
A pointer to second Bezier control point. |
to |
A pointer to the destination point. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
You should call this function between FT_Stroker_BeginSubPath
and FT_Stroker_EndSubPath
.
FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_StrokerBorder border, FT_UInt *anum_points, FT_UInt *anum_contours );
Call this function once you have finished parsing your paths with the stroker. It returns the number of points and contours necessary to export one of the ‘border’ or ‘stroke’ outlines generated by the stroker.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
border |
The border index. |
output
anum_points |
The number of points. |
anum_contours |
The number of contours. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
note
When an outline, or a sub-path, is ‘closed’, the stroker generates two independent ‘border’ outlines, named ‘left’ and ‘right’.
When the outline, or a sub-path, is ‘opened’, the stroker merges the ‘border’ outlines with caps. The ‘left’ border receives all points, while the ‘right’ border becomes empty.
Use the function FT_Stroker_GetCounts
instead if you want to retrieve the counts associated to both borders.
FT_Stroker_ExportBorder¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( void ) FT_Stroker_ExportBorder( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_StrokerBorder border, FT_Outline* outline );
Call this function after FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts
to export the corresponding border to your own FT_Outline
structure.
Note that this function appends the border points and contours to your outline, but does not try to resize its arrays.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
border |
The border index. |
outline |
The target outline handle. |
note
Always call this function after FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts
to get sure that there is enough room in your FT_Outline
object to receive all new data.
When an outline, or a sub-path, is ‘closed’, the stroker generates two independent ‘border’ outlines, named ‘left’ and ‘right’.
When the outline, or a sub-path, is ‘opened’, the stroker merges the ‘border’ outlines with caps. The ‘left’ border receives all points, while the ‘right’ border becomes empty.
Use the function FT_Stroker_Export
instead if you want to retrieve all borders at once.
FT_Stroker_GetCounts¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( FT_Error ) FT_Stroker_GetCounts( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_UInt *anum_points, FT_UInt *anum_contours );
Call this function once you have finished parsing your paths with the stroker. It returns the number of points and contours necessary to export all points/borders from the stroked outline/path.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
output
anum_points |
The number of points. |
anum_contours |
The number of contours. |
return
FreeType error code. 0 means success.
FT_Stroker_Export¶
Defined in FT_STROKER_H (freetype/ftstroke.h).
FT_EXPORT( void ) FT_Stroker_Export( FT_Stroker stroker, FT_Outline* outline );
Call this function after FT_Stroker_GetBorderCounts
to export all borders to your own FT_Outline
structure.
Note that this function appends the border points and contours to your outline, but does not try to resize its arrays.
input
stroker |
The target stroker handle. |
outline |
The target outline handle. |