diff options
author | npm <npm@chromium.org> | 2016-08-24 11:23:49 -0700 |
---|---|---|
committer | Commit bot <commit-bot@chromium.org> | 2016-08-24 11:23:49 -0700 |
commit | b107193e9780b4a50e85d54c1ffbd2303263e193 (patch) | |
tree | fb81a07ad10477d16af26667aa4e4629328b6084 /skia | |
parent | cedaa557316a3f5c436814e69d67f19795f471d7 (diff) | |
download | pdfium-b107193e9780b4a50e85d54c1ffbd2303263e193.tar.xz |
Allow CPDF_Font to use fallback fonts
Added a vector of pointers to CFX_Fonts in the class CPDF_Font, so that
fallback fonts may be used. In CPDF_CharPosList::Load, the glyphs for each
character are calculated. When m_Font does not support a character, a fallback
font is selected and the character is rendered using that font. This meant
adding an attribute to FXTEXT_CHARPOS so it knows which font renders it.
Also, methods in fpdf_render_text.cpp now may need to call device drawing
methods multiple times because these only support one font at a time. In
CPDF_TextRenderer::DrawNormalText and in CPDF_TextRenderer::DrawTextPath, the
device drawing method is called as few times as possible by grouping contiguous
characters rendered by the same font. In
CPDF_RenderStatus::DrawTextPathWithPattern, drawing was already done one
character at a time, but precalculating CFX_FaceCache. Now, the face cache is
precalculated for all of the fallback fonts.
The list of fallback fonts does not include tha main font. Otherwise the list
would be of raw pointers to avoid double free problems. For now, the font
Arial is used as fallback. This should fix the issue of not seeing Latin
characters displayed when bad fonts are used. However, this should be improved.
Tested manually using the file in the bug, plus a font directory containing a
font that supports Hangul but not Latin. This font is chosen as the substitute
font, but Latin characters are now being rendered.
Design proposal: go/pdfium_fallbackfonts
BUG=pdfium:358
Review-Url: https://codereview.chromium.org/2276653002
Diffstat (limited to 'skia')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions