/* * Copyright (c) 2003, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. * Copyright (C) 2009 - 2011 Volker Berlin (i-net software) * DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER. * * This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it * under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 only, as * published by the Free Software Foundation. Oracle designates this * particular file as subject to the "Classpath" exception as provided * by Oracle in the LICENSE file that accompanied this code. * * This code is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License * version 2 for more details (a copy is included in the LICENSE file that * accompanied this code). * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License version * 2 along with this work; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, * Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA. * * Please contact Oracle, 500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood Shores, CA 94065 USA * or visit www.oracle.com if you need additional information or have any * questions. */ package sun.font; import java.awt.Font; import java.lang.reflect.Method; import java.util.Locale; import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap; import javax.swing.plaf.FontUIResource; import cli.System.Drawing.FontFamily; import ikvm.internal.NotYetImplementedError; /* * Interface between Java Fonts (java.awt.Font) and the underlying * font files/native font resources and the Java and native font scalers. */ public final class FontManager { public static final int NO_FALLBACK = 0; public static final int PHYSICAL_FALLBACK = 1; public static final int LOGICAL_FALLBACK = 2; /* deprecated, unsupported hack - actually invokes a bug! */ private static boolean usePlatformFontMetrics = false; private static ConcurrentHashMap<String, Font2D> fontNameCache = new ConcurrentHashMap<String, Font2D>(); private static final Method getFont2D; static{ try{ getFont2D = Font.class.getDeclaredMethod("getFont2D"); getFont2D.setAccessible(true); }catch(NoSuchMethodException ex){ NoClassDefFoundError error = new NoClassDefFoundError(ex.toString()); error.initCause(ex); throw error; } } /* Revise the implementation to in fact mean "font is a composite font. * This ensures that Swing components will always benefit from the * fall back fonts */ public static boolean fontSupportsDefaultEncoding(Font font) { // In Java the font must be a instanceof CompositeFont // because .NET fonts are all already Composite Fonts (I think) that we can return true // and does not need to implements CompositeFont return true; } /** * This method is provided for internal and exclusive use by Swing. * * It may be used in conjunction with fontSupportsDefaultEncoding(Font) * In the event that a desktop properties font doesn't directly * support the default encoding, (ie because the host OS supports * adding support for the current locale automatically for native apps), * then Swing calls this method to get a font which uses the specified * font for the code points it covers, but also supports this locale * just as the standard composite fonts do. * Note: this will over-ride any setting where an application * specifies it prefers locale specific composite fonts. * The logic for this, is that this method is used only where the user or * application has specified that the native L&F be used, and that * we should honour that request to use the same font as native apps use. * * The behaviour of this method is to construct a new composite * Font object that uses the specified physical font as its first * component, and adds all the components of "dialog" as fall back * components. * The method currently assumes that only the size and style attributes * are set on the specified font. It doesn't copy the font transform or * other attributes because they aren't set on a font created from * the desktop. This will need to be fixed if use is broadened. * * Operations such as Font.deriveFont will work properly on the * font returned by this method for deriving a different point size. * Additionally it tries to support a different style by calling * getNewComposite() below. That also supports replacing slot zero * with a different physical font but that is expected to be "rare". * Deriving with a different style is needed because its been shown * that some applications try to do this for Swing FontUIResources. * Also operations such as new Font(font.getFontName(..), Font.PLAIN, 14); * will NOT yield the same result, as the new underlying CompositeFont * cannot be "looked up" in the font registry. * This returns a FontUIResource as that is the Font sub-class needed * by Swing. * Suggested usage is something like : * FontUIResource fuir; * Font desktopFont = getDesktopFont(..); * // NOTE even if fontSupportsDefaultEncoding returns true because * // you get Tahoma and are running in an English locale, you may * // still want to just call getCompositeFontUIResource() anyway * // as only then will you get fallback fonts - eg for CJK. * if (FontManager.fontSupportsDefaultEncoding(desktopFont)) { * fuir = new FontUIResource(..); * } else { * fuir = FontManager.getCompositeFontUIResource(desktopFont); * } * return fuir; */ public static FontUIResource getCompositeFontUIResource(Font font) { throw new NotYetImplementedError(); } public static Font2D getNewComposite(String family, int style, Font2D handle) { throw new NotYetImplementedError(); } /* * return String representation of style prepended with "." * This is useful for performance to avoid unnecessary string operations. */ private static String dotStyleStr(int num) { switch(num){ case Font.BOLD: return ".bold"; case Font.ITALIC: return ".italic"; case Font.ITALIC | Font.BOLD: return ".bolditalic"; default: return ".plain"; } } /* * The client supplies a name and a style. * The name could be a family name, or a full name. * A font may exist with the specified style, or it may * exist only in some other style. For non-native fonts the scaler * may be able to emulate the required style. */ public static Font2D findFont2D(String name, int style, int fallback){ String lowerCaseName = name.toLowerCase(Locale.ENGLISH); String mapName = lowerCaseName + dotStyleStr(style); Font2D font2D = fontNameCache.get(mapName); if(font2D != null){ return font2D; } font2D = new PhysicalFont(name,style); fontNameCache.put(mapName, font2D); return font2D; } /** * Create a new Font2D without caching. This is used from createFont * * @param family * .NET FontFamily * @param style * the style * @return a Font2D */ public static Font2D createFont2D( FontFamily family, int style ) { return new PhysicalFont( family, style ); } /* This method can be more efficient as it will only need to * do the lookup once, and subsequent calls on the java.awt.Font * instance can utilise the cached Font2D on that object. * Its unfortunate it needs to be a native method, but the font2D * variable has to be private. */ public static Font2D getFont2D(Font font){ try{ return (Font2D)getFont2D.invoke(font); }catch(Exception ex){ throw new RuntimeException(ex); } } /* Stuff below was in NativeFontWrapper and needed a new home */ /* * Workaround for apps which are dependent on a font metrics bug * in JDK 1.1. This is an unsupported win32 private setting. */ public static boolean usePlatformFontMetrics() { return usePlatformFontMetrics; } /* This method doesn't check if alternates are selected in this app * context. Its used by the FontMetrics caching code which in such * a case cannot retrieve a cached metrics solely on the basis of * the Font.equals() method since it needs to also check if the Font2D * is the same. * We also use non-standard composites for Swing native L&F fonts on * Windows. In that case the policy is that the metrics reported are * based solely on the physical font in the first slot which is the * visible java.awt.Font. So in that case the metrics cache which tests * the Font does what we want. In the near future when we expand the GTK * logical font definitions we may need to revisit this if GTK reports * combined metrics instead. For now though this test can be simple. */ static boolean maybeUsingAlternateCompositeFonts() { // TODO Auto-generated method stub return false; } public static synchronized void preferLocaleFonts() { // TODO Auto-generated method stub } public static synchronized void preferProportionalFonts() { // TODO Auto-generated method stub } public static boolean registerFont(Font font) { /* This method should not be called with "null". * It is the caller's responsibility to ensure that. */ // TODO Auto-generated method stub return false; } /* This is called by Swing passing in a fontconfig family name * such as "sans". In return Swing gets a FontUIResource instance * that has queried fontconfig to resolve the font(s) used for this. * Fontconfig will if asked return a list of fonts to give the largest * possible code point coverage. * For now we use only the first font returned by fontconfig, and * back it up with the most closely matching JDK logical font. * Essentially this means pre-pending what we return now with fontconfig's * preferred physical font. This could lead to some duplication in cases, * if we already included that font later. We probably should remove such * duplicates, but it is not a significant problem. It can be addressed * later as part of creating a Composite which uses more of the * same fonts as fontconfig. At that time we also should pay more * attention to the special rendering instructions fontconfig returns, * such as whether we should prefer embedded bitmaps over antialiasing. * There's no way to express that via a Font at present. */ public static FontUIResource getFontConfigFUIR( String fcFamily, int style, int size ) { return new FontUIResource( fcFamily, style, size ); } /* The following fields and methods which relate to layout * perhaps belong in some other class but FontManager is already * widely used as an entry point for other JDK code that needs * access to the font system internals. */ /** * Referenced by code in the JDK which wants to test for the * minimum char code for which layout may be required. * Note that even basic latin text can benefit from ligatures, * eg "ffi" but we presently apply those only if explicitly * requested with TextAttribute.LIGATURES_ON. * The value here indicates the lowest char code for which failing * to invoke layout would prevent acceptable rendering. */ public static final int MIN_LAYOUT_CHARCODE = 0x0300; /** * Referenced by code in the JDK which wants to test for the * maximum char code for which layout may be required. * Note this does not account for supplementary characters * where the caller interprets 'layout' to mean any case where * one 'char' (ie the java type char) does not map to one glyph */ public static final int MAX_LAYOUT_CHARCODE = 0x206F; /* If the character code falls into any of a number of unicode ranges * where we know that simple left->right layout mapping chars to glyphs * 1:1 and accumulating advances is going to produce incorrect results, * we want to know this so the caller can use a more intelligent layout * approach. A caller who cares about optimum performance may want to * check the first case and skip the method call if its in that range. * Although there's a lot of tests in here, knowing you can skip * CTL saves a great deal more. The rest of the checks are ordered * so that rather than checking explicitly if (>= start & <= end) * which would mean all ranges would need to be checked so be sure * CTL is not needed, the method returns as soon as it recognises * the code point is outside of a CTL ranges. * NOTE: Since this method accepts an 'int' it is asssumed to properly * represent a CHARACTER. ie it assumes the caller has already * converted surrogate pairs into supplementary characters, and so * can handle this case and doesn't need to be told such a case is * 'complex'. */ static boolean isComplexCharCode(int code) { if (code < MIN_LAYOUT_CHARCODE || code > MAX_LAYOUT_CHARCODE) { return false; } else if (code <= 0x036f) { // Trigger layout for combining diacriticals 0x0300->0x036f return true; } else if (code < 0x0590) { // No automatic layout for Greek, Cyrillic, Armenian. return false; } else if (code <= 0x06ff) { // Hebrew 0590 - 05ff // Arabic 0600 - 06ff return true; } else if (code < 0x0900) { return false; // Syriac and Thaana } else if (code <= 0x0e7f) { // if Indic, assume shaping for conjuncts, reordering: // 0900 - 097F Devanagari // 0980 - 09FF Bengali // 0A00 - 0A7F Gurmukhi // 0A80 - 0AFF Gujarati // 0B00 - 0B7F Oriya // 0B80 - 0BFF Tamil // 0C00 - 0C7F Telugu // 0C80 - 0CFF Kannada // 0D00 - 0D7F Malayalam // 0D80 - 0DFF Sinhala // 0E00 - 0E7F if Thai, assume shaping for vowel, tone marks return true; } else if (code < 0x1780) { return false; } else if (code <= 0x17ff) { // 1780 - 17FF Khmer return true; } else if (code < 0x200c) { return false; } else if (code <= 0x200d) { // zwj or zwnj return true; } else if (code >= 0x202a && code <= 0x202e) { // directional control return true; } else if (code >= 0x206a && code <= 0x206f) { // directional control return true; } return false; } /* This is almost the same as the method above, except it takes a * char which means it may include undecoded surrogate pairs. * The distinction is made so that code which needs to identify all * cases in which we do not have a simple mapping from * char->unicode character->glyph can be be identified. * For example measurement cannot simply sum advances of 'chars', * the caret in editable text cannot advance one 'char' at a time, etc. * These callers really are asking for more than whether 'layout' * needs to be run, they need to know if they can assume 1->1 * char->glyph mapping. */ static boolean isNonSimpleChar(char ch) { return isComplexCharCode(ch) || (ch >= CharToGlyphMapper.HI_SURROGATE_START && ch <= CharToGlyphMapper.LO_SURROGATE_END); } /** * If there is anything in the text which triggers a case * where char->glyph does not map 1:1 in straightforward * left->right ordering, then this method returns true. * Scripts which might require it but are not treated as such * due to JDK implementations will not return true. * ie a 'true' return is an indication of the treatment by * the implementation. * Whether supplementary characters should be considered is dependent * on the needs of the caller. Since this method accepts the 'char' type * then such chars are always represented by a pair. From a rendering * perspective these will all (in the cases I know of) still be one * unicode character -> one glyph. But if a caller is using this to * discover any case where it cannot make naive assumptions about * the number of chars, and how to index through them, then it may * need the option to have a 'true' return in such a case. */ public static boolean isComplexText(char [] chs, int start, int limit) { for (int i = start; i < limit; i++) { if (chs[i] < MIN_LAYOUT_CHARCODE) { continue; } else if (isNonSimpleChar(chs[i])) { return true; } } return false; } }