oracular (3) PDF::Builder::Resource::Font::SynFont.3pm.gz

Provided by: libpdf-builder-perl_3.026-1_all bug

NAME

       PDF::Builder::Resource::Font::SynFont - Module for creating temporary synthetic Fonts.

SYNOPSIS

       This module permits you to create a "new" font (loaded temporarily, but not permanently stored) based on
       an existing font, where you can modify certain attributes in the original font, such as:

           * slant/obliqueness
           * extra weight/boldness (by drawing glyph outlines at various line
             thicknesses, rather than just filling enclosed areas)
           * condense/expand (narrower or wider characters)
           * extra space between characters
           * small caps (synthesized, not using any provided with a font)
           * change the encoding

           $pdf = PDF::Builder->new();
           $cft = $pdf->font('Times-Roman');  # corefont, ttfont, etc. also works
           $sft = $pdf->synfont($cft, 'condense' => .75);  # condense by 25%

       This works for corefonts, PS fonts, and TTF/OTF fonts; but does not work for CJK fonts or bitmapped
       fonts.  See also "Synthetic Fonts" in PDF::Builder::Docs.

       Alternate name: "synthetic_font"

       This is for compatibility with recent changes to PDF::API2.

METHODS

   new
           $font = PDF::Builder::Resource::Font::SynFont->new($pdf, $fontobj, %opts)

           Returns a synfont object. $fontobj is a normal font object read in from a file, and $font is the
           modified output.

           Valid options %opts are:

           encode
               Changes the encoding of the font from its default.  See Perl's Encode for the supported values.
               Warning: only single byte encodings are supported. Multibyte encodings such as UTF-8 are invalid.

           pdfname
               Changes the reference-name of the font from its default.  The reference-name is normally
               generated automatically and can be retrieved via $pdfname=$font->name().

               Alternate name: "name" (for PDF::API2 compatibility)

           condense
               Condense/expand factor (0.1-0.9 = condense, 1 = normal, 1.1+ = expand).  It's the multiplier for
               character widths vs. normal.

               Alternate names: "hscale" and "slant" (for PDF::API2 compatibility)

               The slant option is a deprecated name in both PDF::Builder and PDF::API2.  Its value is the same
               as condense value (1 = normal, unchanged scale).  For the hscale option, the value is percentage
               (%), with 100 being normal, and other values 100 times the condense value.  Use only one (at
               most) of these three option names.

           oblique
               Italic angle (+/-) in degrees, where the character box is skewed. While it's unlikely that anyone
               will want to slant characters at +/-360 degrees, they should be aware that these will be treated
               as an angle of 0 degrees (deg2rad() wraps around). 0 degrees of italic slant (obliqueness) is the
               default.

               Alternate name: "angle" (for PDF::API2 compatibility)

               Use only one (at most) of these two option names.

           bold
               Embolding factor (0.1+, bold=1, heavy=2, ...). It is additional outline thickness (linewidth),
               which expands the character (glyph) outwards (as well as shrinking unfilled enclosed areas such
               as bowls and counters).  Normally, the glyph's outline is not drawn (it is only filled); this
               adds a thick outline. The units are in 1/100ths of a text unit.

               If used with the "synthetic_font" alternate entry name, the unit is 1/1000th of a text unit, so
               you will need a value 10 times larger than with the "synfont" entry to get the same effect

           space
               Additional charspacing in thousandths of an em.

           caps
               Create synthetic small-caps. 0 = no, 1 = yes. These are capitals of lowercase letters, at 80%
               height and 88% width. Note that this is guaranteed to cover ASCII lowercase letters only --
               single byte encoded accented characters usually work, but we can make no promises on accented
               characters in general, as well as ligatures!

               Alternate name: "smallcaps" (for PDF::API2 compatibility)

               Use only one (at most) of these two option names.