Manual Pages for Linux CentOS command on man XFreeFontSet
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Manual Pages for Linux CentOS command on man XFreeFontSet

XCreateFontSet(3) XLIB FUNCTIONS XCreateFontSet(3)

NAME

XCreateFontSet, XFreeFontSet - create and free an international text drawing font set SYNTAX XFontSet XCreateFontSet(Display *display, char *basefontnamelist, char ***missingcharsetlistreturn, int *miss‐ ingcharsetcountreturn, char **defstringreturn); void XFreeFontSet(Display *display, XFontSet fontset); ARGUMENTS display Specifies the connection to the X server. basefontnamelist Specifies the base font names. defstringreturn Returns the string drawn for missing charsets. fontset Specifies the font set. missingcharsetcountreturn Returns the number of missing charsets. missingcharsetlistreturn Returns the missing charsets. DESCRIPTION The XCreateFontSet function creates a font set for the specified dis‐ play. The font set is bound to the current locale when XCreateFontSet is called. The font set may be used in subsequent calls to obtain font and character information and to image text in the locale of the font set. The basefontnamelist argument is a list of base font names that Xlib uses to load the fonts needed for the locale. The base font names are

a comma-separated list. The string is null-terminated and is assumed to be in the Host Portable Character Encoding; otherwise, the result is

implementation-dependent. White space immediately on either side of a separating comma is ignored. Use of XLFD font names permits Xlib to obtain the fonts needed for a

variety of locales from a single locale-independent base font name. The single base font name should name a family of fonts whose members are encoded in the various charsets needed by the locales of interest. An XLFD base font name can explicitly name a charset needed for the locale. This allows the user to specify an exact font for use with a charset required by a locale, fully controlling the font selection. If a base font name is not an XLFD name, Xlib will attempt to obtain an XLFD name from the font properties for the font. If this action is successful in obtaining an XLFD name, the XBaseFontNameListOfFontSet

function will return this XLFD name instead of the client-supplied name. Xlib uses the following algorithm to select the fonts that will be used to display text with the XFontSet. For each font charset required by the locale, the base font name list is searched for the first appearance of one of the following cases that names a set of fonts that exist at the server:

· The first XLFD-conforming base font name that specifies the required charset or a superset of the required charset in its CharSetRegistry and CharSetEncoding fields. The implementation may use a base font name whose specified charset is a superset of

the required charset, for example, an ISO8859-1 font for an ASCII charset.

· The first set of one or more XLFD-conforming base font names that specify one or more charsets that can be remapped to support the required charset. The Xlib implementation may recognize various mappings from a required charset to one or more other charsets and use the fonts for those charsets. For example, JIS Roman is ASCII with tilde and backslash replaced by yen and overbar; Xlib may

load an ISO8859-1 font to support this character set if a JIS Roman font is not available.

· The first XLFD-conforming font name or the first non-XLFD font name for which an XLFD font name can be obtained, combined with the required charset (replacing the CharSetRegistry and CharSetEn‐ coding fields in the XLFD font name). As in case 1, the implemen‐ tation may use a charset that is a superset of the required charset.

· The first font name that can be mapped in some implementation- dependent manner to one or more fonts that support imaging text in the charset. For example, assume that a locale required the charsets:

ISO8859-1 JISX0208.1983 JISX0201.1976

GB2312-1980.0 The user could supply a basefontnamelist that explicitly specifies the charsets, ensuring that specific fonts are used if they exist. For example:

"-JIS-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-240-JISX0208.1983-0,\

-JIS-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-120-JISX0201.1976-0,\

-GB-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-240-GB2312-1980.0,\

-Adobe-Courier-Bold-R-Normal25-180-75-75-M-150-ISO8859-1" Alternatively, the user could supply a basefontnamelist that omits the charsets, letting Xlib select font charsets required for the locale. For example:

"-JIS-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-240,\

-JIS-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-120,\

-GB-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal26-180-100-100-C-240,\

-Adobe-Courier-Bold-R-Normal25-180-100-100-M-150" Alternatively, the user could simply supply a single base font name that allows Xlib to select from all available fonts that meet certain minimum XLFD property requirements. For example:

"-*-*-*-R-Normal*-180-100-100-*-*" If XCreateFontSet is unable to create the font set, either because there is insufficient memory or because the current locale is not sup‐ ported, XCreateFontSet returns NULL, missingcharsetlistreturn is set to NULL, and missingcharsetcountreturn is set to zero. If fonts exist for all of the charsets required by the current locale, XCreate‐ FontSet returns a valid XFontSet, missingcharsetlistreturn is set to NULL, and missingcharsetcountreturn is set to zero. If no font exists for one or more of the required charsets, XCreate‐

FontSet sets missingcharsetlistreturn to a list of one or more null- terminated charset names for which no font exists and sets miss‐ ingcharsetcountreturn to the number of missing fonts. The charsets are from the list of the required charsets for the encoding of the locale and do not include any charsets to which Xlib may be able to remap a required charset. If no font exists for any of the required charsets or if the locale definition in Xlib requires that a font exist for a particular charset and a font is not found for that charset, XCreateFontSet returns NULL. Otherwise, XCreateFontSet returns a valid XFontSet to fontset. When an Xmb/wc drawing or measuring function is called with an XFontSet that has missing charsets, some characters in the locale will not be

drawable. If defstringreturn is non-NULL, XCreateFontSet returns a pointer to a string that represents the glyphs that are drawn with this XFontSet when the charsets of the available fonts do not include all font glyphs required to draw a codepoint. The string does not neces‐ sarily consist of valid characters in the current locale and is not necessarily drawn with the fonts loaded for the font set, but the client can draw and measure the default glyphs by including this string in a string being drawn or measured with the XFontSet. If the string returned to defstringreturn is the empty string (""), no glyphs are drawn, and the escapement is zero. The returned string

is null-terminated. It is owned by Xlib and should not be modified or freed by the client. It will be freed by a call to XFreeFontSet with the associated XFontSet. Until freed, its contents will not be modi‐ fied by Xlib. The client is responsible for constructing an error message from the missing charset and default string information and may choose to con‐ tinue operation in the case that some fonts did not exist. The returned XFontSet and missing charset list should be freed with

XFreeFontSet and XFreeStringList, respectively. The client-supplied basefontnamelist may be freed by the client after calling XCreate‐ FontSet. The XFreeFontSet function frees the specified font set. The associated base font name list, font name list, XFontStruct list, and XFontSetEx‐ tents, if any, are freed. SEE ALSO XExtentsofFontSet(3), XFontsOfFontSet(3), XFontSetExtents(3)

Xlib - C Language X Interface X Version 11 libX11 1.6.5 XCreateFontSet(3)




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