Font indexingΒΆ

This example shows how the font tables relate to one another.

Out:

(6, 0, 519, 576)
36 57 65 86
AV -48
AV -49
AV -16
AT -19

import os

import matplotlib
from matplotlib.ft2font import (
    FT2Font, KERNING_DEFAULT, KERNING_UNFITTED, KERNING_UNSCALED)


font = FT2Font(
    os.path.join(matplotlib.get_data_path(), 'fonts/ttf/DejaVuSans.ttf'))
font.set_charmap(0)

codes = font.get_charmap().items()

# make a charname to charcode and glyphind dictionary
coded = {}
glyphd = {}
for ccode, glyphind in codes:
    name = font.get_glyph_name(glyphind)
    coded[name] = ccode
    glyphd[name] = glyphind
    # print(glyphind, ccode, hex(int(ccode)), name)

code = coded['A']
glyph = font.load_char(code)
print(glyph.bbox)
print(glyphd['A'], glyphd['V'], coded['A'], coded['V'])
print('AV', font.get_kerning(glyphd['A'], glyphd['V'], KERNING_DEFAULT))
print('AV', font.get_kerning(glyphd['A'], glyphd['V'], KERNING_UNFITTED))
print('AV', font.get_kerning(glyphd['A'], glyphd['V'], KERNING_UNSCALED))
print('AT', font.get_kerning(glyphd['A'], glyphd['T'], KERNING_UNSCALED))

Keywords: matplotlib code example, codex, python plot, pyplot Gallery generated by Sphinx-Gallery