FreeType-2.8 API Reference

The TrueType driver

Synopsis

interpreter-versionTT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_XXX

While FreeType's TrueType driver doesn't expose API functions by itself, it is possible to control its behaviour with FT_Property_Set and FT_Property_Get. The following lists the available properties together with the necessary macros and structures.

The TrueType driver's module name is ‘truetype’.

We start with a list of definitions, kindly provided by Greg Hitchcock.

Bi-Level Rendering

Monochromatic rendering, exclusively used in the early days of TrueType by both Apple and Microsoft. Microsoft's GDI interface supported hinting of the right-side bearing point, such that the advance width could be non-linear. Most often this was done to achieve some level of glyph symmetry. To enable reasonable performance (e.g., not having to run hinting on all glyphs just to get the widths) there was a bit in the head table indicating if the side bearing was hinted, and additional tables, ‘hdmx’ and ‘LTSH’, to cache hinting widths across multiple sizes and device aspect ratios.

Font Smoothing

Microsoft's GDI implementation of anti-aliasing. Not traditional anti-aliasing as the outlines were hinted before the sampling. The widths matched the bi-level rendering.

ClearType Rendering

Technique that uses physical subpixels to improve rendering on LCD (and other) displays. Because of the higher resolution, many methods of improving symmetry in glyphs through hinting the right-side bearing were no longer necessary. This lead to what GDI calls ‘natural widths’ ClearType, see http://www.beatstamm.com/typography/RTRCh4.htm#Sec21. Since hinting has extra resolution, most non-linearity went away, but it is still possible for hints to change the advance widths in this mode.

ClearType Compatible Widths

One of the earliest challenges with ClearType was allowing the implementation in GDI to be selected without requiring all UI and documents to reflow. To address this, a compatible method of rendering ClearType was added where the font hints are executed once to determine the width in bi-level rendering, and then re-run in ClearType, with the difference in widths being absorbed in the font hints for ClearType (mostly in the white space of hints); see http://www.beatstamm.com/typography/RTRCh4.htm#Sec20. Somewhat by definition, compatible width ClearType allows for non-linear widths, but only when the bi-level version has non-linear widths.

ClearType Subpixel Positioning

One of the nice benefits of ClearType is the ability to more crisply display fractional widths; unfortunately, the GDI model of integer bitmaps did not support this. However, the WPF and Direct Write frameworks do support fractional widths. DWrite calls this ‘natural mode’, not to be confused with GDI's ‘natural widths’. Subpixel positioning, in the current implementation of Direct Write, unfortunately does not support hinted advance widths, see http://www.beatstamm.com/typography/RTRCh4.htm#Sec22. Note that the TrueType interpreter fully allows the advance width to be adjusted in this mode, just the DWrite client will ignore those changes.

ClearType Backward Compatibility

This is a set of exceptions made in the TrueType interpreter to minimize hinting techniques that were problematic with the extra resolution of ClearType; see http://www.beatstamm.com/typography/RTRCh4.htm#Sec1 and http://www.microsoft.com/typography/cleartype/truetypecleartype.aspx. This technique is not to be confused with ClearType compatible widths. ClearType backward compatibility has no direct impact on changing advance widths, but there might be an indirect impact on disabling some deltas. This could be worked around in backward compatibility mode.

Native ClearType Mode

(Not to be confused with ‘natural widths’.) This mode removes all the exceptions in the TrueType interpreter when running with ClearType. Any issues on widths would still apply, though.

interpreter-version

Currently, three versions are available, two representing the bytecode interpreter with subpixel hinting support (old ‘Infinality’ code and new stripped-down and higher performance ‘minimal’ code) and one without, respectively. The default is subpixel support if TT_CONFIG_OPTION_SUBPIXEL_HINTING is defined, and no subpixel support otherwise (since it isn't available then).

If subpixel hinting is on, many TrueType bytecode instructions behave differently compared to B/W or grayscale rendering (except if ‘native ClearType’ is selected by the font). Microsoft's main idea is to render at a much increased horizontal resolution, then sampling down the created output to subpixel precision. However, many older fonts are not suited to this and must be specially taken care of by applying (hardcoded) tweaks in Microsoft's interpreter.

Details on subpixel hinting and some of the necessary tweaks can be found in Greg Hitchcock's whitepaper at ‘http://www.microsoft.com/typography/cleartype/truetypecleartype.aspx’. Note that FreeType currently doesn't really ‘subpixel hint’ (6x1, 6x2, or 6x5 supersampling) like discussed in the paper. Depending on the chosen interpreter, it simply ignores instructions on vertical stems to arrive at very similar results.

The following example code demonstrates how to deactivate subpixel hinting (omitting the error handling).

  FT_Library  library;
  FT_Face     face;
  FT_UInt     interpreter_version = TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_35;


  FT_Init_FreeType( &library );

  FT_Property_Set( library, "truetype",
                            "interpreter-version",
                            &interpreter_version );

note

This property can be used with FT_Property_Get also.

This property can be set via the ‘FREETYPE_PROPERTIES’ environment variable (using values ‘35’, ‘38’, or ‘40’).


TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_XXX

Defined in FT_TRUETYPE_DRIVER_H (freetype/ftttdrv.h).

#define TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_35  35
#define TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_38  38
#define TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_40  40

A list of constants used for the interpreter-version property to select the hinting engine for Truetype fonts.

The numeric value in the constant names represents the version number as returned by the ‘GETINFO’ bytecode instruction.

values

TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_35

Version 35 corresponds to MS rasterizer v.1.7 as used e.g. in Windows 98; only grayscale and B/W rasterizing is supported.

TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_38

Version 38 corresponds to MS rasterizer v.1.9; it is roughly equivalent to the hinting provided by DirectWrite ClearType (as can be found, for example, in the Internet Explorer 9 running on Windows 7). It is used in FreeType to select the ‘Infinality’ subpixel hinting code. The code may be removed in a future version.

TT_INTERPRETER_VERSION_40

Version 40 corresponds to MS rasterizer v.2.1; it is roughly equivalent to the hinting provided by DirectWrite ClearType (as can be found, for example, in Microsoft's Edge Browser on Windows 10). It is used in FreeType to select the ‘minimal’ subpixel hinting code, a stripped-down and higher performance version of the ‘Infinality’ code.

note

This property controls the behaviour of the bytecode interpreter and thus how outlines get hinted. It does not control how glyph get rasterized! In particular, it does not control subpixel color filtering.

If FreeType has not been compiled with the configuration option TT_CONFIG_OPTION_SUBPIXEL_HINTING, selecting version 38 or 40 causes an ‘FT_Err_Unimplemented_Feature’ error.

Depending on the graphics framework, Microsoft uses different bytecode and rendering engines. As a consequence, the version numbers returned by a call to the ‘GETINFO’ bytecode instruction are more convoluted than desired.

Here are two tables that try to shed some light on the possible values for the MS rasterizer engine, together with the additional features introduced by it.

  GETINFO framework               version feature
  -------------------------------------------------------------------
      3   GDI (Win 3.1),            v1.0  16-bit, first version
          TrueImage
     33   GDI (Win NT 3.1),         v1.5  32-bit
          HP Laserjet
     34   GDI (Win 95)              v1.6  font smoothing,
                                          new SCANTYPE opcode
     35   GDI (Win 98/2000)         v1.7  (UN)SCALED_COMPONENT_OFFSET
                                            bits in composite glyphs
     36   MGDI (Win CE 2)           v1.6+ classic ClearType
     37   GDI (XP and later),       v1.8  ClearType
          GDI+ old (before Vista)
     38   GDI+ old (Vista, Win 7),  v1.9  subpixel ClearType,
          WPF                             Y-direction ClearType,
                                          additional error checking
     39   DWrite (before Win 8)     v2.0  subpixel ClearType flags
                                            in GETINFO opcode,
                                          bug fixes
     40   GDI+ (after Win 7),       v2.1  Y-direction ClearType flag
          DWrite (Win 8)                    in GETINFO opcode,
                                          Gray ClearType

The ‘version’ field gives a rough orientation only, since some applications provided certain features much earlier (as an example, Microsoft Reader used subpixel and Y-direction ClearType already in Windows 2000). Similarly, updates to a given framework might include improved hinting support.

   version   sampling          rendering        comment
            x        y       x           y
  --------------------------------------------------------------
    v1.0   normal  normal  B/W           B/W    bi-level
    v1.6   high    high    gray          gray   grayscale
    v1.8   high    normal  color-filter  B/W    (GDI) ClearType
    v1.9   high    high    color-filter  gray   Color ClearType
    v2.1   high    normal  gray          B/W    Gray ClearType
    v2.1   high    high    gray          gray   Gray ClearType

Color and Gray ClearType are the two available variants of ‘Y-direction ClearType’, meaning grayscale rasterization along the Y-direction; the name used in the TrueType specification for this feature is ‘symmetric smoothing’. ‘Classic ClearType’ is the original algorithm used before introducing a modified version in Win XP. Another name for v1.6's grayscale rendering is ‘font smoothing’, and ‘Color ClearType’ is sometimes also called ‘DWrite ClearType’. To differentiate between today's Color ClearType and the earlier ClearType variant with B/W rendering along the vertical axis, the latter is sometimes called ‘GDI ClearType’.

‘Normal’ and ‘high’ sampling describe the (virtual) resolution to access the rasterized outline after the hinting process. ‘Normal’ means 1 sample per grid line (i.e., B/W). In the current Microsoft implementation, ‘high’ means an extra virtual resolution of 16x16 (or 16x1) grid lines per pixel for bytecode instructions like ‘MIRP’. After hinting, these 16 grid lines are mapped to 6x5 (or 6x1) grid lines for color filtering if Color ClearType is activated.

Note that ‘Gray ClearType’ is essentially the same as v1.6's grayscale rendering. However, the GETINFO instruction handles it differently: v1.6 returns bit 12 (hinting for grayscale), while v2.1 returns bits 13 (hinting for ClearType), 18 (symmetrical smoothing), and 19 (Gray ClearType). Also, this mode respects bits 2 and 3 for the version 1 gasp table exclusively (like Color ClearType), while v1.6 only respects the values of version 0 (bits 0 and 1).

Keep in mind that the features of the above interpreter versions might not map exactly to FreeType features or behavior because it is a fundamentally different library with different internals.