Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Move the definition of fz_font to be in a private header file
rather than in the public API. Add accessors for specific
parts of the structure and use them as appropriate.
The font flags, and the harfbuzz records remain public.
This means that only 3 files now need access to the font
implementation (font.c, pdf-font.c and pdf-type3.c). This
may be able to be improved further in future.
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Also change unsigned char into const char for embedded data.
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Use the flags when selecting a fallback font.
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Look up fallback fonts by unicode script, with a flag to select the serif or
sans-serif font style where such variants exist.
Move all builtin fonts into fitz namespace.
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Note: font->fallback is not reference counted here. The fallback
mechanism is probably going to have to change when we add text shaping.
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fz_encode_character_with_fallback finds the first font in the fallback
chain that has the glyph encoded, and if none do then try to encode
a bullet character.
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Currently, every PDF name is allocated in a pdf_obj structure, and
comparisons are done using strcmp. Given that we can predict most
of the PDF names we'll use in a given file, this seems wasteful.
The pdf_obj type is opaque outside the pdf-object.c file, so we can
abuse it slightly without anyone outside knowing.
We collect a sorted list of names used in PDF (resources/pdf/names.txt),
and we add a utility (namedump) that preprocesses this into 2 header
files.
The first (include/mupdf/pdf/pdf-names-table.h, included as part of
include/mupdf/pdf/object.h), defines a set of "PDF_NAME_xxxx"
entries. These are pdf_obj *'s that callers can use to mean "A PDF
object that means literal name 'xxxx'"
The second (source/pdf/pdf-name-impl.h) is a C array of names.
We therefore update the code so that rather than passing "xxxx" to
functions (such as pdf_dict_gets(...)) we now pass PDF_NAME_xxxx (to
pdf_dict_get(...)). This is a fairly natural (if widespread) change.
The pdf_dict_getp (and sibling) functions that take a path (e.g.
"foo/bar/baz") are therefore supplemented with equivalents that
take a list (pdf_dict_getl(... , PDF_NAME_foo, PDF_NAME_bar,
PDF_NAME_baz, NULL)).
The actual implementation of this relies on the fact that small
pointer values are never valid values. For a given pdf_obj *p,
if NULL < (intptr_t)p < PDF_NAME__LIMIT then p is a literal
entry in the name table.
This enables us to do fast pointer compares and to skip expensive
strcmps.
Also, bring "null", "true" and "false" into the same style as PDF names.
Rather than using full pdf_obj structures for null/true/false, use
special pointer values just above the PDF_NAME_ table. This saves
memory and makes comparisons easier.
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Conflicts:
Makefile
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TODO: Support loading GIF.
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