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FontMetrics.java
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/*
* @(#)FontMetrics.java 1.18 98/07/01
*
* Copyright 1995-1998 by Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
* 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, California, 94303, U.S.A.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This software is the confidential and proprietary information
* of Sun Microsystems, Inc. ("Confidential Information"). You
* shall not disclose such Confidential Information and shall use
* it only in accordance with the terms of the license agreement
* you entered into with Sun.
*/
package java.awt;
/**
* A font metrics object, which gives information about the rendering
* of a particular font on a particular screen. Note that the
* implementations of these methods are inefficient, they are usually
* overridden with more efficient toolkit-specific implementations.
* <p>
* <b>Note to subclassers</b>: Since many of these methods form closed
* mutually recursive loops, you must take care that you implement
* at least one of the methods in each such loop in order to prevent
* infinite recursion when your subclass is used.
* In particular, the following is the minimal suggested set of methods
* to override in order to ensure correctness and prevent infinite
* recursion (though other subsets are equally feasible):
* <ul>
* <li><a href=#getAscent>getAscent</a>()
* <li><a href=#getAscent>getDescent</a>()
* <li><a href=#getLeading>getLeading</a>()
* <li><a href=#getMaxAdvance>getMaxAdvance</a>()
* <li><a href="#charWidth(char)">charWidth</a>(char ch)
* <li><a href="#charsWidth(char[], int, int)">charsWidth</a>(char data[], int off, int len)
* </ul>
* <p>
* <img src="images-awt/FontMetrics-1.gif" border=15 align
* ALIGN=right HSPACE=10 VSPACE=7>
* When an application asks AWT to place a character at the position
* (<i>x</i>, <i>y</i>), the character is placed so that its
* reference point (shown as the dot in the accompanying image) is
* put at that position. The reference point specifies a horizontal
* line called the <i>baseline</i> of the character. In normal
* printing, the baselines of characters should align.
* <p>
* In addition, every character in a font has an <i>ascent</i>, a
* <i>descent</i>, and an <i>advance width</i>. The ascent is the
* amount by which the character ascends above the baseline. The
* descent is the amount by which the character descends below the
* baseline. The advance width indicates the position at which AWT
* should place the next character.
* <p>
* If the current character is placed with its reference point
* at the position (<i>x</i>, <i>y</i>), and
* the character's advance width is <i>w</i>, then the following
* character is placed with its reference point at the position
* (<i>x </i><code>+</code><i> w</i>, <i>y</i>).
* The advance width is often the same as the width of character's
* bounding box, but need not be so. In particular, oblique and
* italic fonts often have characters whose top-right corner extends
* slightly beyond the advance width.
* <p>
* An array of characters or a string can also have an ascent, a
* descent, and an advance width. The ascent of the array is the
* maximum ascent of any character in the array. The descent is the
* maximum descent of any character in the array. The advance width
* is the sum of the advance widths of each of the characters in the
* array.
* @version 1.18 07/01/98
* @author Jim Graham
* @see java.awt.Font
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public abstract class FontMetrics implements java.io.Serializable {
/**
* The actual font.
* @see #getFont
* @since JDK1.0
*/
protected Font font;
/*
* JDK 1.1 serialVersionUID
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1681126225205050147L;
/**
* Creates a new <code>FontMetrics</code> object for finding out
* height and width information about the specified font and
* specific character glyphs in that font.
* @param font the font
* @see java.awt.Font
* @since JDK1.0
*/
protected FontMetrics(Font font) {
this.font = font;
}
/**
* Gets the font described by this font metric.
* @return the font described by this font metric.
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public Font getFont() {
return font;
}
/**
* Determines the <em>standard leading</em> of the font described by
* this font metric. The standard leading (interline spacing) is the
* logical amount of space to be reserved between the descent of one
* line of text and the ascent of the next line. The height metric is
* calculated to include this extra space.
* @return the standard leading of the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getHeight
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getAscent
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getDescent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getLeading() {
return 0;
}
/**
* Determines the <em>font ascent</em> of the font described by this
* font metric. The font ascent is the distance from the font's
* baseline to the top of most alphanumeric characters. Some
* characters in the font may extend above the font ascent line.
* @return the font ascent of the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getMaxAscent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getAscent() {
return font.getSize();
}
/**
* Determines the <em>font descent</em> of the font described by this
* font metric. The font descent is the distance from the font's
* baseline to the bottom of most alphanumeric characters with
* descenders. Some characters in the font may extend below the font
* descent line.
* @return the font descent of the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getMaxDescent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getDescent() {
return 0;
}
/**
* Gets the standard height of a line of text in this font. This
* is the distance between the baseline of adjacent lines of text.
* It is the sum of the leading + ascent + descent. There is no
* guarantee that lines of text spaced at this distance will be
* disjoint; such lines may overlap if some characters overshoot
* either the standard ascent or the standard descent metric.
* @return the standard height of the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getLeading
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getAscent
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getDescent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getHeight() {
return getLeading() + getAscent() + getDescent();
}
/**
* Determines the maximum ascent of the font described by this font
* metric. No character extends further above the font's baseline
* than this height.
* @return the maximum ascent of any character in the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getAscent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getMaxAscent() {
return getAscent();
}
/**
* Determines the maximum descent of the font described by this font
* metric. No character extends further below the font's baseline
* than this height.
* @return the maximum descent of any character in the font.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#getDescent
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getMaxDescent() {
return getDescent();
}
/**
* For backward compatibility only.
* @see #getMaxDescent
* @deprecated As of JDK version 1.1.1,
* replaced by <code>getMaxDescent()</code>.
*/
public int getMaxDecent() {
return getMaxDescent();
}
/**
* Gets the maximum advance width of any character in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @return the maximum advance width of any character
* in the font, or <code>-1</code> if the
* maximum advance width is not known.
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int getMaxAdvance() {
return -1;
}
/**
* Returns the advance width of the specified character in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @param ch the character to be measured
* @return the advance width of the specified <code>char</code>
* in the font described by this font metric.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charsWidth
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#stringWidth
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int charWidth(int ch) {
return charWidth((char)ch);
}
/**
* Returns the advance width of the specified character in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @param ch the character to be measured
* @return the advance width of the specified <code>char</code> >
* in the font described by this font metric.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charsWidth
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#stringWidth
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int charWidth(char ch) {
if (ch < 256) {
return getWidths()[ch];
}
char data[] = {ch};
return charsWidth(data, 0, 1);
}
/**
* Returns the total advance width for showing the specified String
* in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @param str the String to be measured
* @return the advance width of the specified string
* in the font described by this font metric.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#bytesWidth
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charsWidth
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int stringWidth(String str) {
int len = str.length();
char data[] = new char[len];
str.getChars(0, len, data, 0);
return charsWidth(data, 0, len);
}
/**
* Returns the total advance width for showing the specified array
* of characters in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @param data the array of characters to be measured
* @param off the start offset of the characters in the array
* @param len the number of characters to be measured from the array
* @return the advance width of the subarray of the specified
* <code>char</code> array in the font described by
* this font metric.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charWidth(int)
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charWidth(char)
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#bytesWidth
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#stringWidth
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int charsWidth(char data[], int off, int len) {
return stringWidth(new String(data, off, len));
}
/**
* Returns the total advance width for showing the specified array
* of bytes in this Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @param data the array of bytes to be measured
* @param off the start offset of the bytes in the array
* @param len the number of bytes to be measured from the array
* @return the advance width of the subarray of the specified
* <code>byte</code> array in the font described by
* this font metric.
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#charsWidth
* @see java.awt.FontMetrics#stringWidth
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int bytesWidth(byte data[], int off, int len) {
return stringWidth(new String(data, 0, off, len));
}
/**
* Gets the advance widths of the first 256 characters in the Font.
* The advance width is the amount by which the current point is
* moved from one character to the next in a line of text.
* @return an array giving the advance widths of the
* characters in the font
* described by this font metric.
* @since JDK1.0
*/
public int[] getWidths() {
int widths[] = new int[256];
for (char ch = 0 ; ch < 256 ; ch++) {
widths[ch] = charWidth(ch);
}
return widths;
}
/**
* Returns a representation of this <code>FontMetric</code>
* object's values as a string.
* @return a string representation of this font metric.
* @since JDK1.0.
*/
public String toString() {
return getClass().getName() + "[font=" + getFont() + "ascent=" +
getAscent() + ", descent=" + getDescent() + ", height=" + getHeight() + "]";
}
}