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1a51771720
Each gtkfont back end now provides a routine that will return the name of a similar font to the current one but one notch larger or smaller. For Pango, this is just a matter of incrementing the font size field in a standard way; for X11 server-side fonts, we have to go and do an XListFonts query with a wildcard that requests fonts that vary only in the size fields from the current one, and then iterate over the result looking for the best one. (I expect this will be more useful to Pango scalable-font users than to X11 fonts, but it seemed a shame not to give the X11 side my best shot while I was at it.) Choice of hotkey: I know I'm being inconsistent with gnome-terminal's use of Ctrl-plus and Ctrl-minus. I thought that was because I was already using Ctrl-minus as a more convenient synonym for Ctrl-underscore (which sends the actual control code 0x1F), but now I actually try it, apparently I'm not. However, Ctrl-plus and Ctrl-minus are quite horrible as a keystroke pair anyway (one has to be typed with shift and one without!), and I feel as if the 'less' and 'greater' signs are more specific anyway, in that they specifically indicate _size_ rather than just 'unspecified numerical value'.
182 lines
5.9 KiB
C
182 lines
5.9 KiB
C
/*
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* Header file for gtkfont.c. Has to be separate from unix.h
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* because it depends on GTK data types, hence can't be included
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* from cross-platform code (which doesn't go near GTK).
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*/
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#ifndef PUTTY_GTKFONT_H
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#define PUTTY_GTKFONT_H
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/*
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* We support two entirely different drawing systems: the old
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* GDK1/GDK2 one which works on server-side X drawables, and the
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* new-style Cairo one. GTK1 only supports GDK drawing; GTK3 only
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* supports Cairo; GTK2 supports both, but deprecates GTK, so we only
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* enable it if we aren't trying on purpose to compile without the
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* deprecated functions.
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*
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* Our different font classes may prefer different drawing systems: X
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* server-side fonts are a lot faster to draw with GDK, but for
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* everything else we prefer Cairo, on general grounds of modernness
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* and also in particular because its matrix-based scaling system
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* gives much nicer results for double-width and double-height text
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* when a scalable font is in use.
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*/
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#if !GTK_CHECK_VERSION(3,0,0) && !defined GDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED
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#define DRAW_TEXT_GDK
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#endif
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#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(2,8,0)
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#define DRAW_TEXT_CAIRO
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#endif
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#if GTK_CHECK_VERSION(3,0,0) || defined GDK_DISABLE_DEPRECATED
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/*
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* Where the facility is available, we prefer to render text on to a
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* persistent server-side pixmap, and redraw windows by simply
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* blitting rectangles of that pixmap into them as needed. This is
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* better for performance since we avoid expensive font rendering
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* calls where possible, and it's particularly good over a non-local X
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* connection because the response to an expose event can now be a
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* very simple rectangle-copy operation rather than a lot of fiddly
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* drawing or bitmap transfer.
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*
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* However, GTK is deprecating the use of server-side pixmaps, so we
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* have to disable this mode under some circumstances.
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*/
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#define NO_BACKING_PIXMAPS
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#endif
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/*
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* Exports from gtkfont.c.
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*/
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struct unifont_vtable; /* contents internal to gtkfont.c */
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typedef struct unifont {
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const struct unifont_vtable *vt;
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/*
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* `Non-static data members' of the `class', accessible to
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* external code.
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*/
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/*
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* public_charset is the charset used when the user asks for
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* `Use font encoding'.
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*/
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int public_charset;
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/*
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* Font dimensions needed by clients.
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*/
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int width, height, ascent, descent;
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/*
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* Indicates whether this font is capable of handling all glyphs
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* (Pango fonts can do this because Pango automatically supplies
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* missing glyphs from other fonts), or whether it would like a
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* fallback font to cope with missing glyphs.
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*/
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int want_fallback;
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/*
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* Preferred drawing API to use when this class of font is active.
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* (See the enum below, in unifont_drawctx.)
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*/
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int preferred_drawtype;
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} unifont;
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/* A default drawtype, for the case where no font exists to make the
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* decision with. */
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#ifdef DRAW_TEXT_CAIRO
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#define DRAW_DEFAULT_CAIRO
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#define DRAWTYPE_DEFAULT DRAWTYPE_CAIRO
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#elif defined DRAW_TEXT_GDK
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#define DRAW_DEFAULT_GDK
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#define DRAWTYPE_DEFAULT DRAWTYPE_GDK
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#else
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#error No drawtype available at all
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#endif
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/*
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* Drawing context passed in to unifont_draw_text, which contains
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* everything required to know where and how to draw the requested
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* text.
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*/
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typedef struct unifont_drawctx {
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enum {
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#ifdef DRAW_TEXT_GDK
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DRAWTYPE_GDK,
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#endif
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#ifdef DRAW_TEXT_CAIRO
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DRAWTYPE_CAIRO,
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#endif
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DRAWTYPE_NTYPES
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} type;
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union {
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#ifdef DRAW_TEXT_GDK
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struct {
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GdkDrawable *target;
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GdkGC *gc;
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} gdk;
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#endif
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#ifdef DRAW_TEXT_CAIRO
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struct {
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/* Need an actual widget, in order to backtrack to its X
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* screen number when creating server-side pixmaps */
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GtkWidget *widget;
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cairo_t *cr;
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cairo_matrix_t origmatrix;
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} cairo;
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#endif
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} u;
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} unifont_drawctx;
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unifont *unifont_create(GtkWidget *widget, const char *name,
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int wide, int bold,
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int shadowoffset, int shadowalways);
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void unifont_destroy(unifont *font);
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void unifont_draw_text(unifont_drawctx *ctx, unifont *font,
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int x, int y, const wchar_t *string, int len,
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int wide, int bold, int cellwidth);
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/* Same as unifont_draw_text, but expects 'string' to contain one
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* normal char plus combining chars, and overdraws them all in the
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* same character cell. */
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void unifont_draw_combining(unifont_drawctx *ctx, unifont *font,
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int x, int y, const wchar_t *string, int len,
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int wide, int bold, int cellwidth);
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/* Return a name that will select a bigger/smaller font than this one,
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* or NULL if no such name is available. */
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char *unifont_size_increment(unifont *font, int increment);
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/*
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* This function behaves exactly like the low-level unifont_create,
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* except that as well as the requested font it also allocates (if
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* necessary) a fallback font for filling in replacement glyphs.
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*
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* Return value is usable with unifont_destroy and unifont_draw_text
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* as if it were an ordinary unifont.
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*/
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unifont *multifont_create(GtkWidget *widget, const char *name,
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int wide, int bold,
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int shadowoffset, int shadowalways);
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/*
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* Unified font selector dialog. I can't be bothered to do a
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* proper GTK subclassing today, so this will just be an ordinary
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* data structure with some useful members.
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*
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* (Of course, these aren't the only members; this structure is
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* contained within a bigger one which holds data visible only to
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* the implementation.)
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*/
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typedef struct unifontsel {
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void *user_data; /* settable by the user */
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GtkWindow *window;
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GtkWidget *ok_button, *cancel_button;
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} unifontsel;
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unifontsel *unifontsel_new(const char *wintitle);
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void unifontsel_destroy(unifontsel *fontsel);
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void unifontsel_set_name(unifontsel *fontsel, const char *fontname);
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char *unifontsel_get_name(unifontsel *fontsel);
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#endif /* PUTTY_GTKFONT_H */
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