A font vertical metrics reporting and line spacing adjustment tool
Project description
Source Repository: https://github.com/source-foundry/font-line
Issue Tracker and Reporting: https://github.com/source-foundry/font-line/issues
License: MIT
About
font-line is a libre, open source command line tool for OpenType vertical metrics reporting and command line based font line spacing modifications. It currently supports .ttf and .otf font builds.
Contents
Quickstart
Install: $ pip install font-line
Metrics Report: $ font-line report [font path]
Modify line spacing: $font-line percent [integer %] [font path]
Install
font-line is built with Python and can be used on systems with Python 2.7+ and Python 3.3+ interpreters, including current releases of pypy and pypy3. You can verify your installed Python version on the command line with the command:
$ python --version
Use either of the following methods to install font-line on your system.
pip Install
The latest font-line release is available through the Python Package Index and can be installed with pip:
$ pip install font-line
To upgrade to a new version of font-line after a pip install, use the command pip install --upgrade font-line.
Download Project Repository and Install
The current repository version (which may be ahead of the PyPI release) can be installed by downloading the repository or cloning it with git:
git clone https://github.com/source-foundry/font-line.git
Navigate to the top level repository directory and enter the following command:
$ python setup.py install
Follow the same instructions to upgrade to a new version of the application if you elect to install with this approach.
Usage
font-line works via sub-commands to the font-line command line executable. The following sub-commands are available:
percent - modify the line spacing of a font to a percent of the Ascender to Descender distance
report - report OpenType metrics values for a font
Usage of these sub-commands is described in detail below.
Vertical Metrics Reporting
The following OpenType vertical metrics values and calculated values derived from these data are displayed with the report sub-command:
[OS/2] TypoAscender
[OS/2] TypoDescender
[OS/2] WinAscent
[OS/2] WinDescent
[OS/2] TypoLineGap
[hhea] Ascent
[hhea] Descent
[hhea] lineGap
[head] unitsPerEm
[head] yMax
[head] yMin
report Sub-Command Usage
Enter one or more font path arguments to the command:
$ font-line report [fontpath 1] <fontpath ...>
Here is an example of the report generated with the Hack typeface file Hack-Regular.ttf using the command:
$ font-line report Hack-Regular.ttf
Example Font Vertical Metrics Report
=== Hack-Regular.ttf === Version 2.020;DEV-03192016; SHA1: 638f033cc1b6a21597359278bee62cf7e96557ff --- Metrics --- [head] Units per Em: 2048 [head] yMax: 2001 [head] yMin: -573 [OS/2] TypoAscender: 1556 [OS/2] TypoDescender: -492 [OS/2] WinAscent: 1901 [OS/2] WinDescent: 483 [hhea] Ascent: 1901 [hhea] Descent: -483 [hhea] LineGap: 0 [OS/2] TypoLineGap: 410 --- Height Calculations by Table Values --- [OS/2] TypoAscender to TypoDescender: 2048 [OS/2] WinAscent to WinDescent: 2384 [hhea] Ascent to Descent: 2384 --- Delta Values --- WinAscent to TypoAscender: 345 Ascent to TypoAscender: 345 WinDescent to TypoDescender: -9 Descent to TypoDescender: -9 --- Ratios --- (Typo Asc + Desc + Linegap) / UPM: 1.2 (winAsc + winDesc) / UPM: 1.16 (hhea Asc + Desc) / UPM: 1.16
The report includes the font version string, a SHA-1 hash digest of the font file, and OpenType table metrics that are associated with line spacing in the font.
Unix/Linux/OS X users can write this report to a file with the > command line idiom:
$ font-line report TheFont.ttf > font-report.txt
You can modify font-report.txt to the file path of your choice.
Vertical Metrics Modifications
font-line supports automated line spacing modifications to a user-defined percentage of the units per em metric. This value will be abbreviated as UPM below.
percent Sub-Command Usage
Enter the desired percentage of the UPM as the first argument to the command. This should be entered as an integer value. Then enter one or more font paths to which you would like to apply your font metrics changes.
$ font-line percent [percent change] [fontpath 1] <fontpath ...>
A common default value used by typeface designers is 20% UPM. To modify a font on the path TheFont.ttf to 20% of the UPM metric, you would enter the following command:
$ font-line percent 20 TheFont.ttf
Increase or decrease the integer value to increase or decrease your line spacing accordingly.
The original font file is preserved in an unmodified version and the modified file write takes place on a new path defined as [original filename]-linegap[percent].[ttf|otf]. The path to the file is reported to you in the standard output after the modification is completed. font-line does not modify the glyph set or hints applied to the font. See the Details section below for a description of the OpenType table modifications that occur when the application is used on a font file.
You can inspect the vertical metrics in the new font file with the report sub-command (see Usage above).
Details of Font Metrics Changes with percent Sub-Command
The interpretation and display of these multiple vertical metrics values is platform and application dependent. There is no broadly accepted “best” approach. As such, font-line attempts to preserve the original metrics design in the font when modifications are made with the percent sub-command.
font-line currently supports three commonly used vertical metrics approaches.
Vertical Metrics Approach 1:
Where metrics are defined as:
[OS/2] TypoLinegap = 0
[hhea] linegap = 0
[OS/2] TypoAscender = [OS/2] winAscent = [hhea] Ascent
[OS/2] TypoDescender = [OS/2] winDescent = [hhea] Descent
font-line calculates a delta value for the total expected height based upon the % UPM value defined on the command line. The difference between this value and the observed number of units that span the [OS/2] winAscent to winDescent values is divided by half and then added to (for increased line spacing) or subtracted from (for decreased line spacing) each of the three sets of Ascender/Descender values in the font. The [OS/2] TypoLinegap and [hhea] linegap values are not modified.
Vertical Metrics Approach 2
Where metrics are defined as:
[OS/2] TypoLinegap = 0
[hhea] linegap = 0
[OS/2] TypoAscender + TypoDescender = UPM
[OS/2] winAscent = [hhea] Ascent
[OS/2] winDescent = [hhea] Descent
font-line calculates a delta value for the total expected height based upon the % UPM value defined on the command line. The difference between this value and the observed number of units that span the [OS/2] winAscent to winDescent values is divided by half and then added to (for increased line spacing) or subtracted from (for decreased line spacing) the [OS/2] winAsc/winDesc and [hhea] Asc/Desc values. The [OS/2] TypoAsc/TypoDesc values are not modified and maintain a definition of size = UPM value. The [OS/2] TypoLinegap and [hhea] linegap values are not modified.
Vertical Metrics Approach 3
Where metrics are defined as:
[OS/2] TypoAscender + TypoDescender = UPM
[OS/2] TypoLinegap is set to leading value
[hhea] linegap = 0
[OS/2] winAscent = [hhea] Ascent
[OS/2] winDescent = [hhea] Descent
Changes to the metrics values in the font are defined as:
[OS/2] TypoLineGap = x% * UPM value
[hhea] Ascent = [OS/2] TypoAscender + 0.5(modified TypoLineGap)
[hhea] Descent = [OS/2] TypoDescender + 0.5(modified TypoLineGap)
[OS/2] WinAscent = [OS/2] TypoAscender + 0.5(modified TypoLineGap)
[OS/2] WinDescent = [OS/2] TypoDescender + 0.5(modified TypoLineGap)
Note that the internal leading modifications are split evenly across [hhea] Ascent & Descent values, and across [OS/2] WinAscent & WinDescent values. We add half of the new [OS/2] TypoLineGap value to the original [OS/2] TypoAscender or TypoDescender in order to define these new metrics properties. The [hhea] linegap value is always defined as zero.
Important
The newly defined vertical metrics values can lead to clipping of glyph components if not properly defined. There are no tests in font-line to provide assurance that this does not occur. We assume that the user is versed in these issues before use of the application and leave this testing to the designer / user before the modified fonts are used in a production setting.
Issue Reporting
Please submit a new issue report on the project repository.
Acknowledgments
font-line is built with the fantastic fontTools Python library.
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