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<chapter id="getting-started">
<title>Getting started with HarfBuzz</title>
<section>
<title>An overview of the HarfBuzz shaping API</title>
<para>
The core of the HarfBuzz shaping API is the function
<function>hb_shape()</function>. This function takes a font, a
buffer containing a string of Unicode codepoints and
(optionally) a list of font features as its input. It replaces
the codepoints in the buffer with the corresponding glyphs from
the font, correctly ordered and positioned, and with any of the
optional font features applied.
</para>
<para>
In addition to holding the pre-shaping input (the Unicode
codepoints that comprise the input string) and the post-shaping
output (the glyphs and positions), a HarfBuzz buffer has several
properties that affect shaping. The most important are the
text-flow direction (e.g., left-to-right, right-to-left,
top-to-bottom, or bottom-to-top), the script tag, and the
language tag. HarfBuzz can attempt to guess the correct values
for the buffer based on its contents if you do not set them
explicitly.
</para>
<para>
For input string buffers, flags are available to denote when the
buffer represents the beginning or end of a paragraph, to
indicate whether or not to visibly render Unicode <literal>Default
Ignorable</literal> codepoints, and to modify the cluster-merging
behavior for the buffer. For shaped output buffers, the
individual X and Y offsets and widths of each glyph are
accessible. HarfBuzz also flags glyphs as
<literal>UNSAFE_TO_BREAK</literal> if breaking the string at
that glyph (e.g., in a line-breaking or hyphenation process)
would alter the shaping output for the buffer.
</para>
<para>
HarfBuzz also provides methods to compare the contents of
buffers, join buffers, normalize buffer contents, and handle
invalid codepoints, as well as to determine the state of a
buffer (e.g., input codepoints or output glyphs). Buffer
lifecycles are managed and all buffers are reference-counted.
</para>
<para>
Although the default <function>hb_shape()</function> function is
sufficient for most use cases, a variant is also provide that
lets you specify which of HarfBuzz's shapers to use on a buffer.
</para>
<para>
HarfBuzz can read TrueType fonts, TrueType collections, OpenType
fonts, and OpenType collections. Functions are provided to query
font objects about metrics, Unicode coverage, available tables and
features, and variation selectors. Individual glyphs can also be
queried for metrics, variations, and glyph names. OpenType
variable fonts are supported, and HarfBuzz allows you to set
variation-axis coordinates on font objects.
</para>
<para>
HarfBuzz provides glue code to integrate with FreeType, GObject,
Uniscribe, and CoreText. Support for integrating with
DirectWrite is experimental at present.
</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Terminology</title>
<variablelist>
<varlistentry>
<term>shaper</term>
<listitem>
<para>
In HarfBuzz, a <emphasis>shaper</emphasis> is a
handler for a specific script shaping model. HarfBuzz
implements separate shapers for Indic, Arabic, Thai and
Lao, Khmer, Myanmar, Tibetan, Hangul, Hebrew, the
Universal Shaping Engine (USE), and a default shaper for
non-complex scripts.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry>
<term>cluster</term>
<listitem>
<para>
In text shaping, a <emphasis>cluster</emphasis> is a
sequence of codepoints that must be handled as an
indivisible unit. Clusters can include codepoint
sequences that form a ligature or base-and-mark
sequences. Tracking and preserving clusters is important
when shaping operations might separate or reorder
codepoints.
</para>
<para>
HarfBuzz provides three cluster
<emphasis>levels</emphasis> that implement different
approaches to the problem of preserving clusters during
shaping operations.
</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</section>
<section>
<title>A simple shaping example</title>
<para>
Below is the simplest HarfBuzz shaping example possible.
</para>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem>
<para>
Create a buffer and put your text in it.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
#include <hb.h>
hb_buffer_t *buf;
buf = hb_buffer_create();
hb_buffer_add_utf8(buf, text, strlen(text), 0, strlen(text));
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="2">
<para>
Guess the script, language and direction of the buffer.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
hb_buffer_guess_segment_properties(buf);
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="3">
<para>
Create a face and a font, using FreeType for now.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
#include <hb-ft.h>
FT_New_Face(ft_library, font_path, index, &face)
hb_font_t *font = hb_ft_font_create(face);
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="4">
<para>
Shape!
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting>
hb_shape(font, buf, NULL, 0);
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="5">
<para>
Get the glyph and position information.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
hb_glyph_info_t *glyph_info = hb_buffer_get_glyph_infos(buf, &glyph_count);
hb_glyph_position_t *glyph_pos = hb_buffer_get_glyph_positions(buf, &glyph_count);
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="6">
<para>
Iterate over each glyph.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
for (i = 0; i < glyph_count; ++i) {
glyphid = glyph_info[i].codepoint;
x_offset = glyph_pos[i].x_offset / 64.0;
y_offset = glyph_pos[i].y_offset / 64.0;
x_advance = glyph_pos[i].x_advance / 64.0;
y_advance = glyph_pos[i].y_advance / 64.0;
draw_glyph(glyphid, cursor_x + x_offset, cursor_y + y_offset);
cursor_x += x_advance;
cursor_y += y_advance;
}
</programlisting>
<orderedlist numeration="arabic">
<listitem override="7">
<para>
Tidy up.
</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
<programlisting language="C">
hb_buffer_destroy(buf);
hb_font_destroy(hb_ft_font);
</programlisting>
<para>
This example shows enough to get us started using HarfBuzz. In
the sections that follow, we will use the remainder of
HarfBuzz's API to refine and extend the example and improve its
text-shaping capabilities.
</para>
</section>
</chapter>
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