Reject caches when FcPattern isn't a constant.
This is usually unlikely to happen but reported.
I've decided to add more validation since this isn't reproducible
and easy to have a workaround rather than investigating 'why'.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=103237
Trying to address what these configuration files really do.
This change allows to see the short description that mention
the purpose of the content in the config file and obtain
them through API.
This change also encourage one who want to make some UI for
the user-specific configuration management. it is the main
purpose of this change for me though.
Aside from that, I've also made programs translatable. so
we see more dependencies on the build time for gettext,
and itstool to generate PO from xml.
Prefer the system provided emoji fonts on systems which provide one,
such as Windows, MacOS and Android, even if the Emoji One or Emoji Two
fonts are installed.
This also allows free software OSes such as GNOME to prefer the Emoji
One font, which is not used in other OSes and therefore has a unique
brand identity, by installing them and only them by default.
Users can use more capable fonts while Emoji One and Emoji Two catch up
by installing a font otherwise already used by another system, such as
Google's freely redistributable Noto Emoji font.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1496761
VotoSerifGX has over 500 named instances, which means it also has over a thousand
name table entries. So we were looking for names for over 500 pattern, looking for
some thirty different name-ids, and using linear search across the 1000 entries!
Makes scanning VotoSerifGX three times faster. The rest is probably the lang
matching, which can also be shared across named-instances. Upcoming.
This reverts commit 57764e3a36449da25bb829c34cb08c54e9e5de90.
For regular font pattern we don't look into fvar, so it doesn't make sense to
get non-variation from it either.
Old logic was really bad. If you requested weight=102 and got a medium
font (weight=100), it would still enable emboldening...
Adjust it to only embolden if request was >= bold and font was <= regular.
Has two distinctions from FcCompareRange():
1. As best value, it returns query pattern size, even if it's out of font range,
2. Implements semi-closed interval, as that's what OS/2 v5 table defines