Textarea and monospace fonts - textarea

In case cols textarea attribute "specifies the visible width in average character widths", why it doesn't mean, in fact, that if one uses monospace font, he'll get exactly as many letters to fit textarea rect, as it actually defined in cols?
upd:

In case of monospace, you should get exactly that much. Depending on the font however, spacing between two glyphs can be relevant.

Works for me in Firefox 3.6.12/Linux and w3m 0.5.1.
and

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iOS UILabel and avoiding clipping of diacritics with custom font

First of all, there are many questions on StackOverflow, but none that fully answer this question.
The problem is mainly, but most likely not limited to, Thai and Arabic diacritics when rendered with a custom Latin-only font, using the text property of a UILabel. Which is also intrinsically sized in an auto-layout. I've already done everything Apple suggests, playing with the settings mentioned in their documentation, WWDC videos, as well as questions on StackOverflow (e.g. clipsToBounds = NO, etc.). Keep in mind, only my custom font setup clips in my scenario, not the iOS system font (.SF-UIDisplay), and not even the iOS system provided Helvetica or Helvetic Neue. The custom font has been checked and rechecked, and at this point the conclusion, iOS is the anomaly across all platforms, even macOS. To be even clearer, the same clipping behavior as the custom font can be seen with SF Pro, a font provided by Apple themselves here: https://developer.apple.com/fonts/
This question is about the most proper, least intrusive, and most complete way to do what is necessary to not clip diacritics. Meaning, how would you do this, ideally, from scratch.
All of my font research and test runs have led all those involved in this problem to believe that Apple has implemented special treatment specifically for their system fonts in UILabel, to avoid diacritic clipping. So making that an assumption, I'm also assuming the font is ok, and I'm looking for solutions that do not involve editing the font.
In my tries to use the font, the first thing to go wrong was vertical clipping of the ascender diacritics of Thai glyphs:
นื้ทั้มูHello
This means the glyphs of the font Thonburi when they cascade from the custom Latin-only font. The fix from this point, was to use a custom font only for Thai without any Latin characters, so it could be defined as the primary font, and cascade to the previously mentioned Latin-only custom font. After all this, the custom Thai font still has horizontal clipping issues on diacritics that come at the end of the text:
Worldฟล์
So now I am at a loss for anything further that font management puppetry can do (though still open to suggestions), and I am moving on to more code-centric fixes. I've seen quite a few questions and answers mentioning subclassing UILabel, but I'd like to know what this would look like that could accomplish what I've described.
I'd also like to know if just opting out of UILabel would be an option for anyone. Meaning would writing something from the ground up with TextKit be worth it to avoid all these bugs that seem to only plague iOS, and specifically UILabel.
At first I thought this was a problem with the framework but it's not, it's just a strict enforcement of a font's metrics. And in probably everything but web/app development, fonts are not rendered so strictly, which is why this problem rarely comes up. Fonts have a number of metrics that tell the program rendering it onto the screen how to render it, most importantly how to handle padding. And UILabel (and UITextField, and likely others) applies these metrics strictly. And the problem for us is that some fonts are very decorative and are often too thick or oblique to fit perfectly into the square canvas that each character must fit into (this is especially the case with accents, like umlauts). This isn't a problem outside of web/app development because when a character doesn't fit into its canvas, like a very thick, wide, and oblique W, the program just shows it anyway, and that's why a low-hanging g might spill into the line below it. But if that g was rendered in a single-line UILabel, because of how strict the font-metric enforcement is in iOS, that low-handing g is clipped.
Subclassing UILabel (in the case of UILabel) and overriding its intrinsicContentSize to add some extra padding is not a good idea, on further research. For one, it's kind of hacky, but more importantly, it produces constraint warnings in the debugger. The true fix, and the only acceptable fix AFAIK, is to edit the font's metrics.
Download a program like Glyphs (https://glyphsapp.com/), open the font, open the Font's Info, and in the Masters tab, give the font the proper ascender and descender values. To best understand how these values work, open the San Francisco font in the program and see how Apple did it (it's the font they made specifically for macOS and iOS development). As a side note, if you use this app, when you're editing the font's info, go into the Features tab as well, delete all of the features (using the minus icon in the lower left) and hit Update to let the program manage the font's features for you.
The last hurdle is clipping at the leading edge (not the top and bottom) which the ascender and descender metrics don't address. You can use the Glyphs program to edit the canvas size of individual characters to make sure they all fit but that changes the complexion of the font because it changes the character spacing too noticeably. For this problem, I think the best solution is to simply use attributed strings for your labels and text fields. And that's because attributed strings let you safely edit padding without hacking into intrinsic sizes. An example:
someLabel.attributedText = NSAttributedString(string: "Done", attributes: [NSAttributedString.Key.font: UIFont.blackItalic(size: 26), NSAttributedString.Key.foregroundColor: UIColor.black, NSAttributedString.Key.paragraphStyle: NSMutableParagraphStyle.kItalicCenter])
For convenience, I extended NSMutableParagraphStyle since I use this font all over:
extension NSMutableParagraphStyle {
static var kItalicCenter: NSMutableParagraphStyle {
let s = NSMutableParagraphStyle()
s.alignment = .center
s.firstLineHeadIndent = 2
s.headIndent = 2
return s
}
}
This label will push the font forward a couple of points to prevent clipping.
I was trying to solve similar problem with diacritics in Arabic and found workaround:
I have a UITableViewCell with UILabel with arabic text, it's diacritics were cut sometimes
I overrided - (void)drawRect:(CGRect)frame to directly draw NSAttributedString on UITableViewCell
Also I decreased alpha self.arabicLabel.alpha = 0.1; to draw manually on top of label position, I still keep it to calculate cell's height
- (void)drawRect:(CGRect)frame {
[super drawRect:frame];
if (self.viewModel == nil) return;
NSAttributedString *string = [self.viewModel arabicStringWithTajweed];
CGRect originalRect = [self convertRect:self.arabicLabel.frame fromView:self.arabicLabel];
[string drawInRect:originalRect];
}
The core problem on iOS is font substitution. You are specifying a latin font, the font does not contain glyphs for the characters that will be rendered, the system uses a different font to draw the glyphs, but it is still measuring based on the original font.
Option 1, the most robust option, is to manually choose fonts that include glyphs for the characters you will render. When the font assigned to UILabel, or the attributed string it is rendering, contains all the glyphs that will be rendered, and that font has good metrics as most system fonts do, then nothing will be clipped.
Option 2, manually measure the string using glyph bounds. Make a subclass of UILabel and override textRectForBounds and possibly drawText. Measure the string with .usesDeviceMetrics. This is slower that measuring by font metrics and produces different results. For example, the strings "a" and "A" will measure differently.
Option 3, use baseline offset and line height multiple to make room for the diacritics that are being clipped. Choose or compute constant values for each font for each language, and apply those to the attributed string of the UILabel. This can compensate for the different in font metrics between the font you chose and the font that is actually rendering glyphs. We had localized strings with the worst case clipped characters for each language, and used those to compute the offset and height. Different fonts have different worst case clipping characters.

Add custom space to UILabel

I've a weird problem that faces me. I've a UILabel contains text of multiple lines and I'm using bullet in the first line "•".
But my problem is that the second line is not aligned with first character after the bullet.
I measured it and found that width of the bullet is a little bit bigger tan width of normal space.
Is there any trick for that?
the issue is concerning font attributes. Get into the difference of monospaced fonts and proportional fonts, then you will know why there's a difference between space and bullet in your font
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monospaced_font
easy solution and maybe really an option for you is to use a monospaced font.
Okay, I found a powerful answer by using NSParagraphStyle.
https://wingoodharry.wordpress.com/2016/04/10/bullet-point-list-ios-swift/

Change the height of individual characters using core text

I have a font where unfortunately the numbers and letters are different heights. I need to display a reference code which is a mix of letters and numbers and the uneven heights of the characters looks jarring. Is it possible with core text (or another technology on iOS) to render certain characters with a slightly stretched height so that it looks even numbers and letters are displayed together.
E.g i have the string '23Rt59RQ' I need the 2,3,5,9 to be rendered with a larger height.
AFAICT, there's nothing in the CGContext API (which is what you'd want to use for laying out sets of glyphs) which would directly, easily facilitate this.
If it's really very important to use the font you are using, you could make separate calls to CGContextShowGlyphsAtPositions for alphabetic and numeral characters, calling CGContextSetFontSize each time so that the end result ends up matching, but this is a lot of overhead for just drawing text, and will probably result in undesirable performance.
My real advice would be to pick a better font so that this isn't even an issue :)
In the end of used regex to identify the character groups and then created an attributed string varying the font size in the font given in the NSFontAttributeName attribute according to which characters were to be displayed.
Kinda hacky but it had the desired effect.

How to adjust Font Size according text viewable in a TButton.Text using Firemonkey?

I am using buttons to display product names in a matrix using TGridLayout.
The problem is that commonly Items contains 3 or 4 words and in my language (Portuguese) some words tend to be long.
I would like that somehow I could calculate the size of the font, decreasing it, in order to make all the text show up automatically (of course there is also a decrease limit, anything below 9 or 8 point for the font turn to be difficult to read).
The wordwrap property is turned on to have many lines, and use the most possible space for the text.
I don't know if you're programming for an Android/iOS app, but you can't change the fontsize of a button. I've had the same problem, my solution was to make an abbreviation of the words. And then i put labels above it to explain the abbreviations.
Of course you can adjust the font size of a button:
TButton.TextSettings.Font.Size

What are the options to get \mathcal working for lower case letters?

that is I'd like $\mathcal{l}=\mathcal{L}$ to produce two letters. I know \mathcal{} works (predictably) on upper case letters only. Thanks.
Try the following (in your preamble):
\DeclareFontFamily{OT1}{pzc}{}
\DeclareFontShape{OT1}{pzc}{m}{it}{<-> s * [1.10] pzcmi7t}{}
\DeclareMathAlphabet{\mathpzc}{OT1}{pzc}{m}{it}
Then $\mathpzc{l}=\mathcal{L}$ should work. Note that $\mathpzc{L}$ is not the same as $\mathcal{L}$.
The scaling is designed to make the \mathpzc font about the same size as the \mathcal font.
This is using Zapf Chancery which is the standard PostScript calligraphic font.

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