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Fontana

Toolkit for OpenType / TrueType fonts; text rendering in general


TLDR:

  • In development, but functional
  • TTF / OTF loading + drawing
  • Wrapper over multiple backends
    • Custom built (Including rasterizer)
    • Freetype
    • Freetype & Harfbuzz
  • Intended for use with low-level graphics API (Vulkan, WebGPU, etc)
  • Will later pivot into new simplified Font format intended for projects that have the luxury of embedding fonts (games, operating systems, etc)

Scope

  • Definition of a new Font Format designed primarily for embedded use
  • Converter from TTF / OTF -> Embedded format
  • Easy to use wrapper around Freetype / Harfbuzz for drawing
  • Custom Font loading / rendering backend

API & Usage

NOTE: This only refers to the TTF / OTF loading / drawing capabilities. Custom font format is still a TODO. See Roadmap for state of project

Currently, the API is very simple but provides a lot of flexibility through comptime configuration.

The first step is creating the Font type, which takes a backend as a comptime configuration option. The options are: fontana, freetype and freetype_harfbuzz. In the example below, we're using the custom built fontana backend:

const font_backend: fontana.Backend = .fontana;
const Font = fontana.Font(font_backend);

var font = try Font.initFromFile(allocator, font_path);
defer font.deinit(allocator);

The Font type has 3 public functions, initFromFile(), deinit() and createPen(). The first two work as expected, so let's move onto the Pen type.

The Pen type encapsules an atlas, font size and collection of codepoints. The specified codepoints will be converted into glyphs and rasterised to a texture. If working on an application that will be rendering text at different sizes, you can generate more Pens from the same Font.

NOTE: The Font Atlas managed by a Pen can share the backing texture with other parts of an application, it only owns the meta-data about what rendered glyphs are stored where.

Here's the function signature:

pub fn createPen(
    self: *@This(),
    comptime PixelType: type,
    allocator: std.mem.Allocator,
    size: Size,
    points_per_pixel: f64,
    codepoints: []const u8,
    texture_size: u32,
    texture_pixels: [*]PixelType,
) !Pen

Continuing the above example, here a Pen is created from our font.

const PixelType = graphics.RGBA(f32);
const points_per_pixel = 100;
const font_size = fontana.Size{ .point = 24.0 };
const pen = try font.createPen(
    PixelType,
    allocator,
    font_size,
    points_per_pixel,
    atlas_codepoints,
    texture.dimensions.width,
    texture.pixels,
);

NOTE: The Atlas only supports square textures, hence texture_size as opposed to texture_dimensions

NOTE: The PixelType is passed by the client and it's properties are detected automatically during rasterization. Unless it's a very irregular type it should just work.

The Pen type has a single purpose, to generate texture quads to a vertex buffer that can be used by a graphics API to draw text to the screen. It only has a single public function:

pub fn write(
    self: *@This(),
    codepoints: []const u8,
    placement: geometry.Coordinates2D(f64),
    screen_scale: geometry.Scale2D(f64),
    writer_interface: anytype,
) !void

The client specifies what text to render, where to render it on the screen, the scaling of the screen and a comptime interface used to channel the output.

screen_scale converts pixels to the coordinate system of the graphics API, in vulkan it can be calculated as follows:

fn scaleFromScreenDimensions(width: f64, height: f64) Scale2D(f64) {
    return .{
        .vertical = 2.0 / height,
        .horizontal = 2.0 / width,
    };
}

This is because Vulkan uses the NDC right coordinate system, going from -1.0 to +1.0 (Total length of 2.0) on both the X and Y axis.

writer_interface is of a comptime evaluated type, and has to satisfy the following interface:

pub fn write(
    self: *@This(),
    screen_extent: fontana.geometry.Extent2D(f32),
    texture_extent: fontana.geometry.Extent2D(f32),
) !void

All this does is map texture values to locations on the output display, defined in the coordinate system of the underlying graphics API.

Integration

Just add src/fontana.zig as a new package in your build.zig.

const fontana_path = "your_project/deps/fontana";
exe.addPackage(.{
    .name = "fontana",
    .source = .{ .path = fontana_path ++ "/src/fontana.zig" },
});

Fontana is kept in sync with the latest zig release. It was last tested with version 0.12.0-dev.3180.

Example

A running example can be found in the example repository fontana-examples. Non-essential assets including large amount of code are not checked into the main repo to keep it minimal and automation friendly.

To see the above example in complete form, see this file specifically

Roadmap

TODO: Add ROADMAP

License

MIT

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