ttf2png - True Type Font to PNG converter Copyright (c) 2004-2021 Mikko Rasa, Mikkosoft Productions Software requirements FreeType 2 libpng 1.6 C compiler (preferably GCC) Command-line options -r , Range of code points to convert, specified as unicode code points. The default is 0,255, matching the ISO-8859-1 (Latin-1) character set. Code points can be specified as plain numbers, unicode code points (U+xxxx) or UTF-8 characters. This option can be specified multiple times to add more ranges to be converted. -s Font size to use. The default is 10 pixels. -l Number of glyphs to put in one line. Defaults to autodetect. Ignored if -p is used. -c [x] Character cell size. If only a single number is given, a square cell is used. The special values auto and autorect may be used to choose an autodetected square or rectangle cell, respectively. The default is auto. Ignored if -p is used. -o Output file name. Use - for stdout; the output is a png image, so it's best to pipe it somewhere. The default is font.png. -a Force autohinter. By default native hinting is used if present in the font. -t Render glyphs to alpha channel, with grey channel filled with white. By default only the grey channel is used. -i Invert colors of the glyphs. When rendering to alpha channel, only the alpha channel is inverted. The default is to render black glyphs on a white background. -v Increase the level of verbosity. -e Use cells in sequence, without leaving gaps. By default the position of each glyph is determined by its code point. Ignored if -p is used. -p Pack the glyphs tightly in the image. Small gaps are left between glyphs, controlled by the -n option. By default glyphs are rendered in a regular grid. Creating a definition file is recommended, as the resulting image can seem rather messy. -m Leave a margin around the edges of the generated image. By default glyphs can touch the edges. Only used with -p. -n Control the amount of padding between glyphs. The default is 1 pixel. Only used with -p. -g Allow the resulting image to have a non-power-of-two size. By default the image size is rounded up to a power of two for maximum compatibility. -f Generate a distance field texture. The argument controls the amount of oversampling when calculating distances. Larger values may produce more accurate results but take longer to process. Distance fields are always stored without alpha and with large/positive values indicating the inside of glyphs; the -t and -i options are ignored. -b Set the border zone width for distance field. The default is the square root of the font size. -d File name to write glyph definitions. See the section below for details. -h Print a help message with option summary. Glyph definition files Rendering a proportional font correctly requires some positioning and spacing information, called font metrics. To that end, ttf2png can write a definition file alongside the image. The basic format is line-based. Empty lines, or those starting with a hash sign (#), should be ignored. Data lines consist of a keyword followed by space-separated fields. The keyword "font" is followed by five fields with overall information about the image and the font: Fields 1-2: width and height of the image Field 3: nominal size of the font Fields 4-5: ascent and descent of the font The keyword "code" is followed by two fields establishing a code point to glyph mapping: Field 1: Unicode code point Field 2: Glyph index The keyword "metrics" is followed by six fields describing the metrics of a glyph: Field 1: the index of the glyph Fields 2-3: width and height of the glyph Fields 4-5: x and y offset of the glyph from its base point Field 6: advance from this glyph to the next The following ASCII art image illustrates the basic metrics. The character box is a conceptual rectangle in which most of the glyphs in the font fit. Some fonts may contain glyphs that extend outside of the nominal character box. - - - - - - - - ^ | character box | | | | | | o-------o | ascent | | | | | | glyph | | | | | | | base point | | | \ | | | | | \ | | | _ __x___|_______|___|____|__ baseline y_offset | | | | v | o-------o | | descent - - - - - - - - v |---> x_offset |---------------> advance The keyword "glyph" is followed by six field describing the area of the image used for the glyph: Field 1: the index of the glyph Fields 2-3: x and y position of the glyph in the image Fields 4-5: width and height of the glyph Field 6: border zone included in the image The border zone is used with distance field textures to allow the distance field to extend past the actual glyph. If a glyph has a border, the origin point in the metrics refers to the glyph's lower left corner. Subtract the border width from both coordinates to obtain the correct rendering position for the image. The keyword "kern" is followed by three fields describing kerning between two glyphs: Field 1: the index of the left-hand glyph Field 2: the index of the right-hand glyph Field 3: kerning distance between the glyphs Changelog 2.0 "The release I forgot to make three years ago" - Alternate ways of specifying code point ranges - Multiple code point ranges can be specified - Option to generate non-power-of-two images - Support for distance field generation 1.1 - Controllable margin and padding in packed mode - Do not generate overly large images in sequential grid mode 1.0 - Improve the packing algorithm - Non-square cells for grid mode - Option to invert colors - Include kerning information in definition file 0.3 - Restructure the code - Add tight packing mode - Autodetect cell size and chars-per-line in grid mode 0.2.2 - Write both X and Y offsets of glyphs to the definition file - Output font ascent and descent to definition file 0.2.1 - Don't create too large image with sequential mode if the range is sparse 0.2 - Added output to stdout - Clean up code a bit - Added sequential mode - Added definition file writing 0.1.1 - Added more verbosity - Added transparency mode 0.1 - Initial release License This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.