This code is C++ only. There isn't a single C++ compiler that fails to
understand the "inline" keyword, since it's required by C++98. Any
compiler older than C++98 is likely to choke on the template usage
further down, so this isn't necessary.
Moreover, the C++ standard says you cannot define macros.
[lib.macro.names] says "Nor shall such a translation unit define macros
for names lexically identical to keywords." -- technically, it's a
promise that the Standard Library headers won't do it, the wording means
that the entire translation unit won't do it, which implies no source
can do it.
MSVC complains about it:
fatal error C1189: #error : The C++ Standard Library forbids macroizing
keywords. Enable warning C4005 to find the forbidden macro.
Author: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
This is by no ways to promote non-Unicode encodings. This is an entry
point that takes Unicode codepoints that happen to all be the first
256 characters and hence fit in 8bit strings. This is useful eg in Chrome
where strings that can fit in 8bit are implemented that way, and this
avoids copying into UTF-8 or UTF-16.
Perhaps we should rename this to hb_buffer_add_codepoints8(). I'm also
curious if anyone would be really interested in hb_buffer_add_codepoints16().
Please discuss!
Roboto has glyphs (like 'F') that have 200 kerning pairs.
Add a handcoded bsearch instead of previous linear search.
This doesn't show much speedup though, apparently we spend the
bulk of the time somewhere before here.
For discussion see:
http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/harfbuzz/2012-April/001905.html
Over time we have had added NO_HINTING all over the place in hb-ft. Finish it off.
Not setting ppem on hb-font disables get_contour_point() calls which is good anyway.
See comments in the commit.
When I originally wrote hb-ft, FreeType objects did not support reference
counting. As such, hb_ft_face_create() and hb_ft_font_create() had a
"destroy" callback and client was responsible for making sure FT_Face is
kept around as long as the hb-font/face are alive.
However, since this was not clearly documented, some clienets didn't
correctly did that. In particular, some clients assumed that it's safe
to destroy FT_Face and then hb_face_t. This, indeed, used to work, until
45fd9424c7, which make face destroy access
font tables.
Now, I fixed that issue in 395b35903e since
the access was not needed, but the problem remains that not all clients
handle this correctly. See:
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=86300
Fortunately, FT_Reference_Face() was added to FreeType in 2010, and so we
can use it now. Originally I wanted to change hb_ft_face_create() and
hb_ft_font_create() to reference the face if destroy==NULL was passed in.
That would improve pretty much all clients, with little undesired effects.
Except that FreeType itself, when compiled with HarfBuzz support, calls
hb_ft_font_create() with destroy==NULL and saves the resulting hb-font on
the ft-face (why does it not free it immediately?). Making hb-face
reference ft-face causes a cycling reference there. At least, that's my
current understanding.
At any rate, a cleaner approach, even if it means all clients will need a
change, is to introduce brand new API. Which this commit does.
Some comments added to hb-ft.h, hoping to make future clients make better
choices.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=75299
"Fixes" https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=86300
Based on discussion someone else who had a similar issue, most probably
the user is releasing FT_Face before destructing hb_face_t / hb_font_t.
While that's a client bug, and while we can (and should) use FreeType
refcounting to help avoid that, it happens that we were accessing
the table when we didn't really have to. Avoid that.