@@ -19,9 +19,9 @@ Fonts in PDF and PostScript
1919---------------------------
2020
2121Fonts have a long (and sometimes incompatible) history in computing, leading to
22- different platforms supporting different types of fonts. In practice, there
23- are 3 types of font specifications Matplotlib supports (in addition to 'core
24- fonts' in pdf which is explained later in the guide):
22+ different platforms supporting different types of fonts. In practice,
23+ Matplotlib supports three font specifications (in addition to pdf 'core fonts',
24+ which are explained later in the guide):
2525
2626.. list-table :: Type of Fonts
2727 :header-rows: 1
@@ -40,33 +40,35 @@ fonts' in pdf which is explained later in the guide):
4040 - Do not support font hinting
4141 - Hinting supported (virtual machine processes the "hints")
4242 * - Non-subsetted through Matplotlib
43- - Subsetted via external module ` ttconv < https://github.com/sandflow/ttconv >`_
44- - Subsetted via external module `fonttools <https://github.com/fonttools/fonttools >`__
43+ - Subsetted via external module ttconv
44+ - Subsetted via external module `fontTools <https://github.com/fonttools/fonttools >`__
4545
46- NOTE: Adobe will disable support for authoring with Type 1 fonts in
47- January 2023. `Read more here. <https://helpx.adobe.com/fonts/kb/postscript-type-1-fonts-end-of-support.html >`_
46+ .. note ::
4847
48+ Adobe disabled __ support for authoring with Type 1 fonts in January 2023.
49+
50+ __ https://helpx.adobe.com/fonts/kb/postscript-type-1-fonts-end-of-support.html
4951
5052Other font specifications which Matplotlib supports:
5153
5254- Type 42 fonts (PS):
5355
5456 - PostScript wrapper around TrueType fonts
5557 - 42 is the `Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything! <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Answer_to_Life,_the_Universe,_and_Everything >`_
56- - Matplotlib uses an external library called ` fonttools <https://github.com/fonttools/fonttools >`__
58+ - Matplotlib uses the external library ` fontTools <https://github.com/fonttools/fonttools >`__
5759 to subset these types of fonts
5860
5961- OpenType fonts:
6062
6163 - OpenType is a new standard for digital type fonts, developed jointly by
6264 Adobe and Microsoft
6365 - Generally contain a much larger character set!
64- - Limited Support with Matplotlib
66+ - Limited support with Matplotlib
6567
66- Font Subsetting
68+ Font subsetting
6769~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
6870
69- The PDF and PostScript formats support embedding fonts in files allowing the
71+ The PDF and PostScript formats support embedding fonts in files, allowing the
7072display program to correctly render the text, independent of what fonts are
7173installed on the viewer's computer and without the need to pre-rasterize the text.
7274This ensures that if the output is zoomed or resized the text does not become
@@ -79,10 +81,9 @@ only embed the glyphs actually used. This gets both vector text and small
7981files sizes. Computing the subset of the font required and writing the new
8082(reduced) font are both complex problem and thus Matplotlib relies on
8183`fontTools <https://fonttools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ >`__ and a vendored fork
82- of `ttconv <https://github.com/sandflow/ttconv >`_.
83-
84- Currently Type 3, Type 42, and TrueType fonts are subseted. Type 1 fonts are not.
84+ of ttconv.
8585
86+ Currently Type 3, Type 42, and TrueType fonts are subsetted. Type 1 fonts are not.
8687
8788Core Fonts
8889~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -91,11 +92,11 @@ In addition to the ability to embed fonts, as part of the `PostScript
9192<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PostScript_fonts#Core_Font_Set> `_ and `PDF
9293specification
9394<https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E96927_01/TSG/FAQ/What%20are%20the%2014%20base%20fonts%20distributed%20with%20Acroba.html> `_
94- there are 14 Core Font that compliant viewers must ensure are available. If
95+ there are 14 Core Fonts that compliant viewers must ensure are available. If
9596you restrict your document to only these fonts you do not have to embed any
9697font information in the document but still get vector text.
9798
98- This is especially helpful to generate *really lightweight * documents. ::
99+ This is especially helpful to generate *really lightweight * documents::
99100
100101 # trigger core fonts for PDF backend
101102 plt.rcParams["pdf.use14corefonts"] = True
@@ -109,7 +110,6 @@ This is especially helpful to generate *really lightweight* documents.::
109110 fig.savefig("AFM_PDF.pdf", format="pdf")
110111 fig.savefig("AFM_PS.ps", format="ps)
111112
112-
113113Fonts in SVG
114114------------
115115
@@ -118,12 +118,11 @@ Text can output to SVG in two ways controlled by :rc:`svg.fonttype`:
118118- as a path (``'path' ``) in the SVG
119119- as string in the SVG with font styling on the element (``'none' ``)
120120
121-
122121When saving via ``'path' `` Matplotlib will compute the path of the glyphs used
123- as vector paths and write those to the output. The advantage of this is that
124- the SVG will look the same on all computers independent of what fonts are
122+ as vector paths and write those to the output. The advantage of doing so is
123+ that the SVG will look the same on all computers independent of what fonts are
125124installed. However the text will not be editable after the fact.
126- In contrast saving with ``'none' `` will result in smaller files and the
125+ In contrast, saving with ``'none' `` will result in smaller files and the
127126text will appear directly in the markup. However, the appearance may vary
128127based on the SVG viewer and what fonts are available.
129128
@@ -135,11 +134,10 @@ To output text to raster formats via Agg, Matplotlib relies on `FreeType
135134changes between FreeType versions we pin to a specific version for our image
136135comparison tests.
137136
138-
139137How Matplotlib selects fonts
140138----------------------------
141139
142- Internally using a Font in Matplotlib is a three step process:
140+ Internally, using a font in Matplotlib is a three step process:
143141
1441421. a `.FontProperties ` object is created (explicitly or implicitly)
1451432. based on the `.FontProperties ` object the methods on `.FontManager ` are used
@@ -153,16 +151,16 @@ specified by the `CSS1 Specifications
153151<http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/REC-CSS2-19980512/> `_ which is used by web browsers.
154152This algorithm takes into account the font family name (e.g. "Arial", "Noto
155153Sans CJK", "Hack", ...), the size, style, and weight. In addition to family
156- names that map directly to fonts there are five "generic font family names" (
157- serif, monospace, fantasy, cursive, and sans-serif) that will internally be
154+ names that map directly to fonts there are five "generic font family names"
155+ ( serif, monospace, fantasy, cursive, and sans-serif) that will internally be
158156mapped to any one of a set of fonts.
159157
160158Currently the public API for doing step 2 is `.FontManager.findfont ` (and that
161159method on the global `.FontManager ` instance is aliased at the module level as
162160`.font_manager.findfont `), which will only find a single font and return the absolute
163161path to the font on the filesystem.
164162
165- Font Fallback
163+ Font fallback
166164-------------
167165
168166There is no font that covers the entire Unicode space thus it is possible for the
@@ -173,7 +171,6 @@ same `.Text` instance (as a web browser does). As of Matplotlib 3.6 the Agg,
173171SVG, PDF, and PS backends will "fallback" through multiple fonts in a single
174172`.Text ` instance:
175173
176-
177174.. plot ::
178175 :include-source:
179176 :caption: The string "There are 几个汉字 in between!" rendered with 2 fonts.
@@ -185,7 +182,6 @@ SVG, PDF, and PS backends will "fallback" through multiple fonts in a single
185182 ha='center'
186183 )
187184
188-
189185Internally this is implemented by setting The "font family" on
190186`.FontProperties ` objects to a list of font families. A (currently)
191187private API extracts a list of paths to all of the fonts found and then
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