Native font support for the Diagrams library. The SVG-Font format is easy to parse and was therefore chosen for a font library completely written in Haskell.
You can convert your own font to SVG with FontForge or use one of the SVG fonts included with the library.
Complete implementation of the features that fontforge produces (but not the complete SVG format):
- Kerning (e.g. the two characters in "VA" have a shorter distance than in "VV")
- Unicode
- Ligatures
- Text boxes with syntax highlighting
XML speed issues can be solved by trimming the svg file to only those characters that are used (or maybe binary xml one day)
Version 1.0 of this library supports texturing which would only make sense in a Diagrams Backend that does rasterization in Haskell.
import Diagrams.Prelude
import Diagrams.Backend.SVG.CmdLine
import qualified Graphics.SVGFonts as F
main = do
font <- F.loadFont "/path/to/font.svg"
let
diagram :: Diagram B
diagram =
(F.drop_rect$ F.fit_height 22$ F.svgText def{F.textFont = font} "Hello World!")
# stroke # fc blue # lc blue # bg lightgrey # fillRule EvenOdd # showOrigin
mainWith diagram
Convert your favourite font (i.e. .ttf
) into a .svg
file with
fontforge (the menu item under "Save All"). If a font converted on
your own doesn't work, try the repair options, and if this still
doesn't work edit the file by hand or report an
issue. Remember that a
lot of fonts are not allowed to be distributed freely.
Version 1.8 of the library greatly improved the API but introduced a number of breaking changes.
Previously, functions provided by the library took a large TextOpts
options record and directly produced a diagrams Path
. For example,
it was common to see code like this:
text' font h s = (strokeP $ textSVG' (TextOpts font INSIDE_H KERN False h h) s)
# lw none # fc black
Compared to this, version 1.8:
- Introduces a new intermediate type
PathInRect
- Splits out width and height options into dedicated
combinators such as
fit_width
andfit_height
- There are also several new functions that allow specifying width and
height in different ways, such as
svgText_fitRect
andsvgText_fitRect_stretchySpace
.
The only things remaining in TextOpts
are options for the font,
spacing mode, and underline.
Here is an idiomatic way to translate the above example code into the new API:
text' font h s
= s
# svgText def { textFont = font }
# fit_height h
# set_envelope
# lw none # fc black
- We use the
svgText
function with a default options recorddef
, overriding thetextFont
field to set the font explicitly. - We then use the
fit_height
function to scale the resulting text so it has heighth
. This corresponds to our previous use ofINSIDE_H
. This is probably the most common mode, butfit_width
andsvgText_fitRect
also available. - Finally, we call
set_envelope
which converts aPathInRect
to aDiagram
, by stroking the text path and appropriately setting the envelope. - If you actually want an explicit
Path
instead of aDiagram
, you can calldrop_rect
instead ofset_envelope
. - Note that the old
textSVG'
function resulted in a centered local origin, whereas all the new API functions result in a local origin and the left end of the text baseline. If you need the text centered, you can of course callcenterXY
.