Struct kas_text::TextDisplay [−][src]
pub struct TextDisplay { /* fields omitted */ }Expand description
Text display, without source text representation
In general, it is recommended to use crate::Text instead, which includes
a representation of the source text and environment state.
Once prepared (via TextDisplay::prepare), this struct contains
everything needed to display text, query glyph position and size
requirements, and even re-wrap text lines. It cannot, however, support
editing or cloning the source text.
This struct tracks its state of preparation and can be default-constructed in an unprepared state with no text.
Text navigation
Despite lacking a copy of the underlying text, text-indices may be mapped to glyphs and lines, and vice-versa.
The text range is 0..self.text_len(). Any index within this range
(inclusive of end point) is valid for usage in all methods taking an index.
Multiple indices may map to the same glyph (e.g. within multi-byte chars,
with combining-diacritics, and with ligatures). In some cases a single index
corresponds to multiple glyph positions (due to line-wrapping or change of
direction in bi-directional text).
Navigating to the start or end of a line can be done with
TextDisplay::find_line and TextDisplay::line_range.
Navigating left or right should be done via a library such as
unicode-segmentation
which provides a
GraphemeCursor
to step back or forward one “grapheme”, in logical order. Navigating glyphs
in display-order is not currently supported. Optionally, the direction may
be reversed for right-to-left lines TextDisplay::line_is_rtl, but note
that the result may be confusing since not all text on the line follows the
line’s base direction and adjacent lines may have different directions.
To navigate “up” and “down” lines, use TextDisplay::text_glyph_pos to
get the position of the cursor, TextDisplay::find_line to get the line
number, then TextDisplay::line_index_nearest to find the new index.
Implementations
pub fn text_glyph_pos(&self, index: usize) -> MarkerPosIterⓘNotable traits for MarkerPosIterimpl Iterator for MarkerPosIter type Item = MarkerPos;
pub fn text_glyph_pos(&self, index: usize) -> MarkerPosIterⓘNotable traits for MarkerPosIterimpl Iterator for MarkerPosIter type Item = MarkerPos;
impl Iterator for MarkerPosIter type Item = MarkerPos;Find the starting position (top-left) of the glyph at the given index
The index should be no greater than the text length. It is not required to be on a code-point boundary. Returns an iterator over matching positions. Length of results is guaranteed to be one of 0, 1 or 2:
- 0 if the index is not included in any run of text (probably only possible within a multi-byte line break or beyond the text length)
- 1 is the normal case
- 2 if the index is at the end of one run of text and at the start
of another; these positions may be the same or may not be (over
line breaks and with bidirectional text). If only a single position
is desired, usually the latter is preferred (via
next_back()).
Note: if the text’s bounding rect does not start at the origin, then
the coordinates of the top-left corner should be added to the result(s).
The result is also not guaranteed to be within the expected window
between 0 and self.env().bounds. The user should clamp the result.
Get the number of glyphs
This method is a simple memory-read.
Yield a sequence of positioned glyphs
Glyphs are yielded in undefined order by a call to f. The number of
glyphs yielded will equal TextDisplay::num_glyphs. The closure f
receives parameters face_id, dpem, glyph.
This may be used as follows:
let mut text = Text::new_single("Some example text");
text.prepare();
let mut glyphs = Vec::with_capacity(text.num_glyphs());
text.glyphs(|_, dpem, glyph| glyphs.push((dpem, glyph)));
draw(glyphs);This method has fairly low cost: O(n) in the number of glyphs with
low overhead.
One must call TextDisplay::prepare before this method.
Like TextDisplay::glyphs but with added effects
If the list effects is empty or has first entry with start > 0, the
result of Effect::default(default_aux) is used. The user payload of
type X is simply passed through to f and g calls and may be useful
for colour information.
The callback f receives face_id, dpem, glyph, i, aux where
dpu and height are both measures of the font size (pixels per font
unit and pixels per height, respectively), and i is the index within
effects (or usize::MAX when a default-constructed effect token is
used).
The callback g receives positioning for each underline/strikethrough
segment: x1, x2, y_top, h where h is the thickness (height). Note
that it is possible to have h < 1.0 and y_top, y_top + h to round to
the same number; the renderer is responsible for ensuring such lines
are actually visible. The last parameters are i, aux as for f.
Note: this is significantly more computationally expensive than
TextDisplay::glyphs. Optionally one may choose to cache the result,
though this is not really necessary.
Yield a sequence of rectangles to highlight a given range, by lines
Rectangles span to end and beginning of lines when wrapping lines. (Note: gaps are possible between runs in the first and last lines. This is a defect which should be fixed but low priority and trickier than it might seem due to bi-directional text allowing re-ordering of runs.)
This locates the ends of a range as with TextDisplay::text_glyph_pos, but
yields a separate rect for each “run” within this range (where “run” is
a line or part of a line). Rects are represented by the top-left
vertex and the bottom-right vertex.
Note: if the text’s bounding rect does not start at the origin, then
the coordinates of the top-left corner should be added to the result(s).
The result is also not guaranteed to be within the expected window
between 0 and self.env().bounds. The user should clamp the result.
Yield a sequence of rectangles to highlight a given range, by runs
Rectangles tightly fit each “run” (piece) of text highlighted. (As an artifact, the highlighting may leave gaps between runs. This may or may not change in the future.)
This locates the ends of a range as with TextDisplay::text_glyph_pos, but
yields a separate rect for each “run” within this range (where “run” is
is a line or part of a line). Rects are represented by the top-left
vertex and the bottom-right vertex.
Note: if the text’s bounding rect does not start at the origin, then
the coordinates of the top-left corner should be added to the result(s).
The result is also not guaranteed to be within the expected window
between 0 and self.env().bounds. The user should clamp the result.
Update font size
This updates the result of TextDisplay::prepare_runs due to change
in font size.
Prerequisites: prepared runs: panics if action is greater than Action::Wrap.
Post-requirements: prepare lines (requires action Action::Wrap).
Parameters: see crate::Environment documentation.
pub fn prepare_runs<F: FormattableText>(
&mut self,
text: &F,
bidi: bool,
dir: Direction,
font_id: FontId,
dpp: f32,
pt_size: f32
)
pub fn prepare_runs<F: FormattableText>(
&mut self,
text: &F,
bidi: bool,
dir: Direction,
font_id: FontId,
dpp: f32,
pt_size: f32
)
Prepare text runs
This is the first step of preparation: breaking text into runs according to font properties, bidi-levels and line-wrap points.
Prerequisites: none (ignores current action state).
Post-requirements: prepare lines (requires action Action::Wrap).
Parameters: see crate::Environment documentation.
Prepare lines (“wrap”)
This does text layout, with wrapping if enabled.
Prerequisites: prepared runs: panics if action is greater than Action::Wrap.
Post-requirements: none (Action::None).
Parameters: see crate::Environment documentation.
Returns: required size, in pixels.
Get required action
Require an action
Required actions are tracked internally. This combines internal action
state with that input via max. It may be used, for example, to mark
that fonts need resizing due to change in environment.
Prepare text for display, as necessary
Does all preparation steps necessary in order to display or query the layout of this text.
Required preparation actions are tracked internally, but cannot
notice changes in the environment. In case the environment has changed
one should either call TextDisplay::require_action before this
method or use the TextDisplay::prepare_runs,
TextDisplay::resize_runs and TextDisplay::prepare_lines methods.
Returns new size requirements, if an update action occurred. Returns
None if no action was required (since requirements are computed as a
side-effect of line-wrapping, and presumably in this case the existing
allocation is sufficient). One may force calculation of this value by
calling text.require_action(Action::Wrap).
Find the line containing text index
Returns the line number and the text-range of the line.
Returns None in case index does not line on or at the end of a line
(which means either that index is beyond the end of the text or that
index is within a mult-byte line break).
Get the range of a line, by line number
Get the directionality of the current line
Returns true for left-to-right lines, false for RTL.
Panics if line >= self.num_lines().
Get the directionality of the current line
Returns true for right-to-left lines, false for LTR.
Panics if line >= self.num_lines().
Find the text index for the glyph nearest the given pos
This includes the index immediately after the last glyph, thus
result ≤ text.len().
Note: if the font’s rect does not start at the origin, then its top-left
coordinate should first be subtracted from pos.
Find the text index nearest horizontal-coordinate x on line
This is similar to TextDisplay::text_index_nearest, but allows the
line to be specified explicitly. Returns None only on invalid line.
Trait Implementations
Performs the conversion.
Performs the conversion.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for TextDisplay
impl Send for TextDisplay
impl Sync for TextDisplay
impl Unpin for TextDisplay
impl UnwindSafe for TextDisplay
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Cast to integer, truncating Read more
Cast to the nearest integer Read more
Cast the floor to an integer Read more
Try converting to integer with truncation Read more
Try converting to the nearest integer Read more
Try converting the floor to an integer Read more
Try convert the ceiling to an integer Read more