man Font::TTF::Name () - String table for a TTF font
NAME
Font::TTF::Name - String table for a TTF font
DESCRIPTION
Strings are held by number, platform, encoding and language. Strings are accessed as:
$f->{'name'}{'strings'}[$number][$platform_id][$encoding_id]{$language_id}
Notice that the language is held in an associative array due to its sparse nature on some platforms such as Microsoft ($pid = 3). Notice also that the array order is different from the stored array order (platform, encoding, language, number) to allow for easy manipulation of strings by number (which is what I guess most people will want to do).
By default, CW$Font::TTF::Name::utf8 is set to 1, and strings will be stored as UTF8 wherever possible. The method CWis_utf8 can be used to find out if a string in a particular platform and encoding will be returned as UTF8. Unicode strings are always converted if utf8 is requested. Otherwise, strings are stored according to platform:
***WARNING NON-UTF8 is deprecated and utf8 strings has become the default***
You now have to set <$Font::TTF::Name::utf8> to 0 to get the old behaviour.
- Apple Unicode (platform id = 0)
- Data is stored as network ordered UCS2. There is no encoding id for this platform but there are language ids as per Mac language ids.
- Mac (platform id = 1)
- Data is stored as 8-bit binary data, leaving the interpretation to the user according to encoding id.
- Unicode (platform id = 2)
- Currently stored as 16-bit network ordered UCS2. Upon release of Perl 5.005 this will change to utf8 assuming current UCS2 semantics for all encoding ids.
- Windows (platform id = 3)
- As per Unicode, the data is currently stored as 16-bit network ordered UCS2. Upon release of Perl 5.005 this will change to utf8 assuming current UCS2 semantics for all encoding ids.
INSTANCE VARIABLES
- strings
- An array of arrays, etc.
METHODS
$t->read
Reads all the names into memory
$t->out($fh)
Writes out all the strings Outputs the string element in nice XML (which is all the table really!) Store strings in the right place Returns whether a string of a given platform and encoding is going to be in UTF8
find_name($nid)
Hunts down a name in all the standard places and returns the string and for an array context the pid, eid & lid as well
BUGS
- •
- Unicode type strings will be stored in utf8 for all known platforms, once Perl 5.6 has been released and I can find all the mapping tables, etc.
AUTHOR
Martin Hosken Martin_Hosken@sil.org. See Font::TTF::Font for copyright and licensing.