Provided by: libfont-freetype-perl_0.03-1build4_amd64 bug

NAME

       Font::FreeType::Glyph - glyphs from font typefaces loaded from Font::FreeType

SYNOPSIS

           use Font::FreeType;

           my $freetype = Font::FreeType->new;
           my $face = $freetype->face('Vera.ttf');
           $face->set_char_size(24, 24, 100, 100);

           my $glyph = $face->glyph_from_char('A');
           my $glyph = $face->glyph_from_char_code(65);

           # Render into an array of strings, one byte per pixel.
           my ($bitmap, $left, $top) = $glyph->bitmap;

           # Read vector outline.
           $glyph->outline_decompose(
               move_to => sub { ... },
               line_to => sub { ... },
               conic_to => sub { ... },
               cubic_to => sub { ... },
           );

DESCRIPTION

       This class represents an individual glyph (character image) loaded from a font.  See
       Font::FreeType::Face for how to obtain a glyph object, in particular the
       "glyph_from_char_code()" and "glyph_from_char()" methods.

       Things you an do with glyphs include:

       •   Get metadata about the glyph, such as the size of its image and other metrics.

       •   Render a bitmap image of the glyph (if it's from a vector font) or extract the
           existing bitmap (if it's from a bitmap font), using the "bitmap()" method.

       •   Extract a precise description of the lines and curves that make up the glyph's
           outline, using the "outline_decompose()" method.

       For a detailed description of the meaning of glyph metrics, and the structure of vectorial
       outlines, see <http://freetype.sourceforge.net/freetype2/docs/glyphs/>

METHODS

       Unless otherwise stated, all methods will die if there is an error, and the metrics are
       scaled to the size of the font face.

       bitmap([render-mode])
           If the glyph is from a bitmap font, the bitmap image is returned.  If it is from a
           vector font, then the outline is rendered into a bitmap at the face's current size.

           Three values are returned: the bitmap itself, the number of pixels from the origin to
           where the left of the area the bitmap describes, and the number of pixels from the
           origin to the top of the area of the bitmap (positive being up).

           The bitmap value is a reference to an array.  Each item in the array represents a line
           of the bitmap, starting from the top.  Each item is a string of bytes, with one byte
           representing one pixel of the image, starting from the left.  A value of 0 indicates
           background (outside the glyph outline), and 255 represents a point inside the outline.

           If antialiasing is used then shades of grey between 0 and 255 may occur.  Antialiasing
           is performed by default, but can be turned off by passing the "FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO"
           option.

           The size of the bitmap can be obtained as follows:

               my ($bitmap, $left, $top) = $glyph->bitmap;
               my $width = length $bitmap->[0];
               my $height = @$bitmap;

           The optional "render_mode" argument can be any one of the following:

           FT_RENDER_MODE_NORMAL
               The default.  Uses antialiasing.

           FT_RENDER_MODE_LIGHT
               Changes the hinting algorithm to make the glyph image closer to it's real shape,
               but probably more fuzzy.

               Only available with Freetype version 2.1.4 or newer.

           FT_RENDER_MODE_MONO
               Render with antialiasing disabled.  Each pixel will be either 0 or 255.

           FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD
               Render in colour for an LCD display, with three times as many pixels across the
               image as normal.  This mode probably won't work yet.

               Only available with Freetype version 2.1.3 or newer.

           FT_RENDER_MODE_LCD_V
               Render in colour for an LCD display, with three times as many rows down the image
               as normal.  This mode probably won't work yet.

               Only available with Freetype version 2.1.3 or newer.

       bitmap_magick([render_mode])
           A simple wrapper around the "bitmap()" method.  Renders the bitmap as normal and
           returns it as an Image::Magick object, which can then be composited onto a larger
           bitmapped image, or manipulated using any of the features available in Image::Magick.

           The image is in the 'gray' format, with a depth of 8 bits.

           The left and top distances in pixels are returned as well, in the same way as for the
           "bitmap()" method.

           This method, particularly the use of the left and top offsets for correct positioning
           of the bitmap, is demonstrated in the magick.pl example program.

       bitmap_pgm([render_mode])
           A simple wrapper around the "bitmap()" method.  It renders the bitmap and constructs
           it into a PGM (portable grey-map) image file, which it returns as a string.  The
           optional render-mode is passed directly to the "bitmap()" method.

           The PGM image returned is in the 'binary' format, with one byte per pixel.  It is not
           an efficient format, but can be read by many image manipulation programs.  For a
           detailed description of the format see <http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pgm.html>

           The left and top distances in pixels are returned as well, in the same way as for the
           "bitmap()" method.

           The render-glyph.pl example program uses this method.

       char_code()
           The character code (in Unicode) of the glyph.  Could potentially return codes in other
           character sets if the font doesn't have a Unicode character mapping, but most modern
           fonts do.

       has_outline()
           True if the glyph has a vector outline, in which case it is safe to call
           "outline_decompose()".  Otherwise, the glyph only has a bitmap image.

       height()
           The height of the glyph.

       horizontal_advance()
           The distance from the origin of this glyph to the place where the next glyph's origin
           should be.  Only applies to horizontal layouts.  Always positive, so for right-to-left
           text (such as Hebrew) it should be subtracted from the current glyph's position.

       index()
           The glyph's index number in the font.  This number is determined by the FreeType
           library, and so isn't necessarily the same as any special index number used by the
           font format.

       left_bearing()
           The left side bearing, which is the distance from the origin to the left of the glyph
           image.  Usually positive for horizontal layouts and negative for vertical ones.

       name()
           The name of the glyph, if the font format supports glyph names, otherwise undef.

       outline_bbox()
           The bounding box of the glyph's outline.  This box will enclose all the 'ink' that
           would be laid down if the outline were filled in.  It is calculated by studying each
           segment of the outline, so may not be particularly efficient.

           The bounding box is returned as a list of four values, so the method should be called
           as follows:

               my ($xmin, $ymin, $xmax, $ymax) = $glyph->outline_bbox();

       outline_decompose(%callbacks)
           This method can be used to extract a description of the glyph's outline, scaled to the
           face's current size.  It will die if the glyph doesn't have an outline (if it comes
           from a bitmap font).

           Vector outlines of glyphs are represented by a sequence of operations.  Each operation
           can start a new curve (by moving the imaginary pen position), or draw a line or curve
           from the current position of the pen to a new position.  This Perl interface will walk
           through the outline calling subroutines (through code references you supply) for each
           operation.  Arguments are passed to your subroutines as normal, in @_.

           Note: when you intend to extract the outline of a glyph, always pass the
           "FT_LOAD_NO_HINTING" option when creating the face object, or the hinting will distort
           the outline.

           The %callbacks parameter should contain three or four of the following keys, each with
           a reference to a "sub" as it's value.  The "conic_to" handler is optional, but the
           others are required.

           "move_to"
               Move the pen to a new position, without adding anything to the outline.  The first
               operation should always be "move_to", but characters with disconnected parts, such
               as "i", might have several of these.

               The x and y coordinates of the new pen position are supplied.

           "line_to"
               Move the pen to a new position, drawing a straight line from the old position.

               The x and y coordinates of the new pen position are supplied.  Depending you how
               you are using this information you may have to keep track of the previous position
               yourself.

           "conic_to"
               Move the pen to a new position, drawing a conic Bezier arc (also known as a
               quadratic Bezier curve) from the old position, using a single control point.

               If you don't supply a "conic_to" handler, all conic curves will be automatically
               translated into cubic curves.

               The x and y coordinates of the new pen position are supplied, followed by the x
               and y coordinates of the control point.

           "cubic_to"
               Move the pen to a new position, drawing a cubic Bezier arc from the old position,
               using two control points.

               Cubic arcs are the ones produced in PostScript by the "curveto" operator.

               The x and y coordinates of the new pen position are supplied, followed by the x
               and y coordinates of the first control point, then the same for the second control
               point.

           Note that TrueType fonts use conic curves and PostScript ones use cubic curves.

       postscript([file-handle])
           Generate PostScript code to draw the outline of the glyph.  More precisely, the output
           will construct a PostScript path for the outline, which can then be filled in or
           stroked as you like.

           The glyph-to-eps.pl example program shows how to wrap the output in enough extra code
           to generate a complete EPS file.

           If you pass a file-handle to this method then it will write the PostScript code to
           that file, otherwise it will return it as a string.

       right_bearing()
           The distance from the right edge of the glyph image to the place where the origin of
           the next character should be (i.e., the end of the advance width).  Only applies to
           horizontal layouts.  Usually positive.

       svg_path()
           Turn the outline of the glyph into a string in a format suitable for including in an
           SVG graphics file, as the "d" attribute of a "path" element.  Note that because SVG's
           coordinate system has its origin in the top left corner the outline will be upside
           down.  An SVG transformation can be used to flip it.

           The glyph-to-svg.pl example program shows how to wrap the output in enough XML to
           generate a complete SVG file, and one way of transforming the outline to be the right
           way up.

           If you pass a file-handle to this method then it will write the path string to that
           file, otherwise it will return it as a string.

       vertical_advance()
           The distance from the origin of the current glyph to the place where the next glyph's
           origin should be, moving down the page.  Only applies to vertical layouts.  Always
           positive.

       width()
           The width of the glyph.  This is the distance from the left side to the right side,
           not the amount you should move along before placing the next glyph when typesetting.
           For that, see the "horizontal_advance()" method.

SEE ALSO

       Font::FreeType, Font::FreeType::Face

AUTHOR

       Geoff Richards <qef@laxan.com>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright 2004, Geoff Richards.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.