[Docs] Usermanual: integration chapter; add Uniscribe/Windows section.

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Nathan Willis 2019-05-24 14:30:15 +01:00
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text-rendering pipeline, and will discuss the APIs available to
integrate HarfBuzz with contemporary Linux, Mac, and Windows
software. It will also show how HarfBuzz integrates with popular
external libaries like FreeType and International Components for
external libraries like FreeType and International Components for
Unicode (ICU) and describe the HarfBuzz language bindings for
Python.
</para>
@ -203,7 +203,7 @@
<programlisting language="C">
#include &lt;hb-ft.h&gt;
...
FT_New_Face(ft_library, font_path, index, &face);
FT_New_Face(ft_library, font_path, index, &amp;face);
FT_Set_Char_Size(face, 0, 1000, 0, 0);
hb_font_t *font = hb_ft_font_create(face);
</programlisting>
@ -303,16 +303,101 @@
<section id="integration-uniscribe">
<title>Uniscribe integration</title>
<para>
If your client program is running on Windows, HarfBuzz can
integrate with the Uniscribe engine.
</para>
<para>
Overall, the Uniscribe API covers a broader set of typographic
layout functions than HarfBuzz implements, but HarfBuzz's
shaping API can serve as a drop-in replacement for the shaping
functionality. In fact, one of HarfBuzz's design goals is to
accurately reproduce the same output for shaping a given text
segment that Uniscribe produces &mdash; even to the point of
duplicating known shaping bugs or deviations from the
specification &mdash; so you can be sure that your users'
documents with their existing fonts will not be affected by
switching to HarfBuzz.
</para>
<para>
At a basic level, HarfBuzz's <function>hb_shape()</function>
function replaces both the <ulink url=""><function>ScriptShape()</function></ulink>
and <ulink url="https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/api/Usp10/nf-usp10-scriptplace"><function>ScriptPlace()</function></ulink> functions from
Uniscribe.
</para>
<para>
However, whereas <function>ScriptShape()</function> returns the
glyphs and clusters for a shaped sequence and
<function>ScriptPlace()</function> returns the advances and
offsets for those glyphs, <function>hb_shape()</function>
handles both. After <function>hb_shape()</function> shapes a
buffer, the output glyph IDs and cluster IDs are returned as
an array of <structname>hb_glyph_info_t</structname> structures, and the
glyph advances and offsets are returned as an array of
<structname>hb_glyph_position_t</structname> structures.
</para>
<para>
Your client program only needs to ensure that it coverts
correctly between HarfBuzz's low-level data types (such as
<type>hb_position_t</type>) and Windows's corresponding types
(such as <type>GOFFSET</type> and <type>ABC</type>). Be sure you
read the <xref linkend="buffers-language-script-and-direction"
/>
chapter for a full explanation of how HarfBuzz input buffers are
used, and see <xref linkend="shaping-buffer-output" /> for the
details of what <function>hb_shape()</function> returns in the
output buffer when shaping is complete.
</para>
<para>
Although <function>hb_shape()</function> itself is functionally
equivalent to Uniscribe's shaping routines, there are two
additional HarfBuzz functions you may want to use to integrate
the libraries in your code. Both are used to link HarfBuzz font
objects to the equivalent Windows structures.
</para>
<para>
The <function>hb_uniscribe_font_get_logfontw()</function>
function takes a <type>hb_font_t</type> font object and returns
a pointer to the <ulink
url="https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/api/wingdi/ns-wingdi-logfontw"><type>LOGFONTW</type></ulink>
"logical font" that corresponds to it. A <type>LOGFONTW</type>
structure holds font-wide attributes, including metrics, size,
and style information.
</para>
SCRIPT_CACHE holds context, including LOGFONT https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/Intl/script-cache
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/api/wingdi/ns-wingdi-logfontw
<para>
The <function>hb_uniscribe_font_get_hfont()</function> function
also takes a <type>hb_font_t</type> font object, but it returns
an <type>HFONT</type> &mdash; a handle to the underlying logical
font &mdash; instead.
</para>
<para>
<type>LOGFONTW</type>s and <type>HFONT</type>s are both needed
by other Uniscribe functions.
</para>
<para>
As a final note, you may notice a reference to an optional
<literal>uniscribe</literal> shaper back-end in the <xref
linkend="configuration" /> section of the HarfBuzz manual. This
option is not a Uniscribe-integration facility.
</para>
<para>
Instead, it is a internal code path used in the
<command>hb-shape</command> command-line utility, which hands
shaping functionality over to Uniscribe entirely, when run on a
Windows system. That allows testing HarfBuzz's native output
against the Uniscribe engine, for tracking compatibility and
debugging.
</para>
<para>
Because this back-end is only used when testing HarfBuzz
functionality, it is disabled by default when building the
HarfBuzz binaries.
</para>
</section>
<section id="integration-coretext">
<title>CoreText integration</title>
<para>
@ -323,6 +408,21 @@
</para>
<para>
</para>
<para>
</para>
<para>
</para>
<para>
</para>
<para>
</para>
<para>
</para>
</section>