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BmpFont

This is a text drawing class for use with sf2dlib. It is designed as a lightweight alternative to sftdlib. sftdlib not only needs to be set up as a library, but also has the overhead of several dependency libraries which must also be linked. This "library" is much easier to set up, because all it requires is that you drag and drop its .cpp and .h files into your project and start using it. There are no dependencies other than sf2dlib.

While sftdlib uses vector-based TrueType font files, BmpFont loads raster-based .BFF font files. These fonts can be generated using Codehead's Bitmap Font Generator (CBFG). It is recommended that you use the 8-bit grayscale format, and use the default white-on-black colors. This provides the smallest file size and still enables you to render text in any color, on a transparent background. The other two formats (24- and 32-bit) will still load fine, but their files are unnecessarily large, and in the case of the 24-bit format, text will not be drawn on a transparent background. These formats are useful if you are creating a full-color font, but while supported by the .BFF file format as well as this library, I don't know of any way to create these other than manually.

Usage

The first step is to place BmpFont.cpp and BmpFont.h in your project's source directory. Then put one or more .bff font files in a location accessible by the program, such as romfs. Let's say you use the fixedsys.bff font included in this example. To draw text using that font, all you need to do is this:

BmpFont font("romfs:/fixedsys.bff"); //Load font file

// ...

sf2d_start_frame(GFX_TOP, GFX_LEFT);
font.drawStr("Hello, world!", 8, 8, RGBA8(0x00, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF));
sf2d_end_frame();

This will use the loaded font to display the text "Hello, world!" in cyan at the coordinates 8, 8. There are also other ways to draw text, such as with character- and word-wrapping, and clipping text to a certain rectangle.

Functions

The entire functionality of this library is contained within the BmpFont class. You draw text by calling member functions of this class. The following is a description of what each function does.

(constructors)

BmpFont();
BmpFont(const char *filename);

The default constructor creates the BmpFont object without loading a font. A font must be loaded (using the load function) before it can be used. Attempting to perform any action on a BmpFont object without a font loaded, except for loading a font or checking the status using operator bool, results in undefined behavior.

If a filename is specified, a font will automatically be loaded upon creation. If an error occurs during loading, the result is the same as if no font was loaded. Use operator bool to check this.

drawChar

u8 drawChar(char ch, int x, int y, u32 color = WHITE) const;

Draws a single character on the screen, and returns the width of the character in pixels.

drawStr

u32 drawStr(const std::string &str, int x, int y, u32 color = WHITE) const;

Draws a string on the screen. The string is drawn on a single line, even if it doesn't fit on the screen, unless the string contains explicit new-line (\n) characters. The return value is the width of the string in pixels.

drawStrWrap

u32 drawStrWrap(const std::string &str, int x, int y, int wrapWidth, u32 color = WHITE) const;

Draws a string on the screen. Word wrapping is performed to keep it at a maximum width of wrapWidth pixels. The return value is the height of the string in pixels. If wrapWidth is negative, wrapping will be performed at any character, regardless of word boundaries.

getTextDims, getTextWidth, getTextHeight

void getTextDims(const std::string &str, u32 &width, u32 &height, int wrapWidth = 0) const;
u32 getTextWidth(const std::string &str, int wrapWidth = 0) const;
u32 getTextHeight(const std::string &str, int wrapWidth = 0) const;

Calculates the width and height of a string as it would be drawn, without actually drawing it. If wrapWidth is specified and nonzero, the width and height are calculated according to how the string would be displayed by drawStrWrap.

getTextWidth and getTextHeight are helper functions that call getTextDims and only return one of the values; use these if you don't need both dimensions.

align

BmpFont &align(TextAlignment alignment);

Sets the alignment for text that will be drawn. Valid options for alignment are ALIGN_LEFT (the default), ALIGN_CENTER, and ALIGN_RIGHT. This affects drawStr, drawStrWrap, and drawStrCharWrap. With the default left alignment, text is printed to the right of the X position specified; with right alignment, it is printed to the left; with center alignment, it is printed on both sides.

clip, unclip

BmpFont &clip(int left, int top, int right, int bottom);
BmpFont &unclip();

After clip is called, any text drawn by this BmpFont object will be clipped to the given rectangle, cutting off anything not inside of it. Things like wrapping are unaffected; every pixel inside the rectangle is exactly as it would be if clipping was not being performed. This behavior will last until clip is called with different parameters, or unclip is called to disable clipping.

These functions return a reference to the object it is called upon, so function calls can be chained.

isClipped

bool isClipped() const;

Returns true if clip boundaries have been specified using the clip function, or false if clipping is disabled.

height

u32 height() const;

Returns the height of a single line displayed using this font.

load

bool load(const char *filename);

Loads a font. If a font is already loaded, free will be called automatically to unload the previous font. If successful, this function will return true. Otherwise, it will return false and the object will remain without a font loaded.

free

void free();

Unloads the currently-loaded font and frees the memory associated with it. After this function is called, no font will be loaded, similar to if the object was created using the default constructor. Note that there is no need to call this function in most cases, as it is automatically called by the destructor.

operator bool

operator bool() const;

Returns true if there is a font loaded, or false if not. This is the only way to check if a font was successfully loaded if it was loaded via the constructor, but generally it won't fail unless there's a problem with the font file.