QFont Class Reference
The QFont class specifies a font used for drawing text.
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#include <qfont.h>
List of all member functions.
Public Members
Static Public Members
Protected Members
Related Functions
QDataStream &
operator<< ( QDataStream & s, const QFont & font )
QDataStream &
operator>> ( QDataStream & s, QFont & font )
Detailed Description
The QFont class specifies a font used for drawing text.
When you create a QFont object you specify various attributes that
you want the font to have. Qt will use the font with the specified
attributes, or if no matching font exists, Qt will use the closest
matching installed font. The attributes of the font that is
actually used are retrievable from a QFontInfo object. If the
window system provides an exact match exactMatch() returns TRUE.
Use QFontMetrics to get measurements, e.g. the pixel length of a
string using QFontMetrics::width().
Use QApplication::setFont() to set the application's default font.
If a choosen X11 font does not include all the characters that
need to be displayed, QFont will try to find the characters in the
nearest equivalent fonts. When a QPainter draws a character from a
font the QFont will report whether or not it has the character; if
it does not, QPainter will draw an unfilled square.
Create QFonts like this:
QFont serifFont( "Times", 10, Bold );
QFont sansFont( "Helvetica [Cronyx]", 12 );
The attributes set in the constructor can also be set later, e.g.
setFamily(), setPointSize(), setPointSizeFloat(), setWeight() and
setItalic(). The remaining attributes must be set after
contstruction, e.g. setBold(), setUnderline(), setStrikeOut() and
setFixedPitch(). QFontInfo objects should be created after the
font's attributes have been set. A QFontInfo object will not
change, even if you change the font's attributes. The
corresponding "get" functions, e.g. family(), pointSize(), etc.,
return the values that were set, even though the values used may
differ. The actual values are available from a QFontInfo object.
If the requested font family is unavailable you can influence the
font matching algorithm by choosing a
particular QFont::StyleHint and QFont::StyleStrategy with
setStyleHint(). The default family (corresponding to the current
style hint) is returned by defaultFamily().
The font-matching algorithm has a lastResortFamily() and
lastResortFont() in cases where a suitable match cannot be found.
You can provide substitutions for font family names using
insertSubstitution() and insertSubstitutions(). Substitutions can
be removed with removeSubstitution(). Use substitute() to retrieve
a family's first substitute, or the family name itself if it has
no substitutes. Use substitutes() to retrieve a list of a family's
substitutes (which may be empty).
Every QFont has a key() which you can use, for example, as the key
in a cache or dictionary. If you want to store a user's font
preferences you could use QSettings, writing the font information
with toString() and reading it back with fromString(). The
operator<<() and operator>>() functions are also available, but
they work on a data stream.
It is possible to set the height of characters shown on the screen
to a specified number of pixels with setPixelSize(); however using
setPointSize() has a similar effect and provides device
independence.
Under the X Window System you can set a font using its system
specific name with setRawName().
Loading fonts can be expensive, especially on X11. QFont contains
extensive optimizations to make the copying of QFont objects fast,
and to cache the results of the slow window system functions it
depends upon.
The font matching algorithm works as follows:
- The specified font family is searched for.
- If not found, the styleHint() is used to select a replacement
family.
- Each replacement font family is searched for.
- If none of these are found or there was no styleHint(), "helvetica"
will be searched for.
- If "helvetica" isn't found Qt will try the lastResortFamily().
- If the lastResortFamily() isn't found Qt will try the
lastResortFont() which will always return a name of some kind.
Once a font is found, the remaining attributes are matched in order of
priority:
- fixedPitch()
- pointSize() (see below)
- weight()
- italic()
If you have a font which matches on family, even if none of the
other attributes match, this font will be chosen in preference to
a font which doesn't match on family but which does match on the
other attributes. This is because font family is the dominant
search criteria.
The point size is defined to match if it is within 20% of the
requested point size. When several fonts match and are only
distinguished by point size, the font with the closest point size
to the one requested will be chosen.
The actual family, font size, weight and other font attributes
used for drawing text will depend on what's available for the
chosen family under the window system. A QFontInfo object can be
used to determine the actual values used for drawing the text.
Examples:
QFont f("Helvetica");
If you had both an Adobe and a Cronyx Helvetica, you might get
either.
QFont f1( "Helvetica [Cronyx]" ); // Qt 3.x
QFont f2( "Cronyx-Helvetica" ); // Qt 2.x compatibility
You can specify the foundry you want in the family name. Both fonts,
f1 and f2, in the above example will be set to "Helvetica
[Cronyx]".
To determine the attributes of the font actually used in the window
system, use a QFontInfo object, e.g.
QFontInfo info( f1 );
QString family = info.family();
To find out font metrics use a QFontMetrics object, e.g.
QFontMetrics fm( f1 );
int pixelWidth = fm.width( "How many pixels wide is this text?" );
int pixelHeight = fm.height();
For more general information on fonts, see the
comp.fonts FAQ.
Information on encodings can be found from
Roman Czyborra's page.
See also QFontMetrics, QFontInfo, QFontDatabase, QApplication::setFont(), QWidget::font, QPainter::setFont(), QFont::StyleHint, QFont::Weight, Widget Appearance and Style, Graphics Classes and Implicitly and Explicitly Shared Classes.
Member Type Documentation
QFont::Script
This enum represents Unicode allocated
scripts. For exhaustive coverage see The
Unicode Standard Version 3.0. The following scripts are
supported:
Modern European alphabetic scripts (left to right):
- QFont::Latin - consists of most alphabets based on the original Latin alphabet.
- QFont::Greek - covers ancient and modern Greek and Coptic.
- QFont::Cyrillic - covers the Slavic and non-Slavic languages using
cyrillic alphabets.
- QFont::Armenian - contains the Armenian alphabet used with the
Armenian language.
- QFont::Georgian - covers at least the language Georgian.
- QFont::Runic - covers the known constituents of the Runic alphabets used
by the early and medieval societies in the Germanic,
Scandinavian, and Anglo-Saxon areas.
- QFont::Ogham - is an alphabetical script used to write a very early
form of Irish.
- QFont::SpacingModifiers - are small signs indicating modifications
to the preceeding letter.
- QFont::CombiningMarks - consist of diacritical marks not specific to
a particular alphabet, diacritical marks used in
combination with mathematical and technical symbols, and
glyph encodings applied to multiple letterforms.
Middle Eastern scripts (right to left):
- QFont::Hebrew - is used for writing Hebrew, Yiddish, and some other languages.
- QFont::Arabic - covers the Arabic language as well as Persian, Urdu,
Kurdish and some others.
- QFont::Syriac - is used to write the active liturgical languages and
dialects of several Middle Eastern and Southeast Indian
communities.
- QFont::Thaana - is used to write the Maledivian Dhivehi language.
South and Southeast Asian scripts (left to right with few historical exceptions):
- QFont::Devanagari - covers classical Sanskrit and modern Hindi as
well as several other languages.
- QFont::Bengali - is a relative to Devanagari employed to write the
Bengali language used in West Bengal/India and Bangladesh
as well as several minority languages.
- QFont::Gurmukhi - is another Devanagari relative used to write Punjabi.
- QFont::Gujarati - is closely related to Devanagari and used to write
the Gujarati language of the Gujarat state in India.
- QFont::Oriya - is used to write the Oriya language of Orissa state/India.
- QFont::Tamil - is used to write the Tamil language of Tamil Nadu state/India,
Sri Lanka, Singapore and parts of Malaysia as well as some
minority languages.
- QFont::Telugu - is used to write the Telugu language of Andhra
Pradesh state/India and some minority languages.
- QFont::Kannada - is another South Indian script used to write the
Kannada language of Karnataka state/India and some minority
languages.
- QFont::Malayalam - is used to write the Malayalam language of Kerala
state/India.
- QFont::Sinhala - is used for Sri Lanka's majority language Sinhala
and is also employed to write Pali, Sanskrit, and Tamil.
- QFont::Thai - is used to write Thai and other Southeast Asian languages.
- QFont::Lao - is a language and script quite similar to Thai.
- QFont::Tibetan - is the script used to write Tibetan in several
countries like Tibet, the bordering Indian regions and
Nepal. It is also used in the Buddist philosophy and
liturgy of the Mongolian cultural area.
- QFont::Myanmar - is mainly used to write the Burmese language of
Myanmar (former Burma).
- QFont::Khmer - is the official language of Kampuchea.
East Asian scripts (traditionally top-down, right to left, modern
often horizontal left to right):
- QFont::Han - consists of the CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean)
idiographic characters.
- QFont::Hiragana - is a cursive syllabary used to indicate phonetics
and pronounciation of Japanese words.
- QFont::Katakana - is a non-cursive syllabic script used to write
Japanese words with visual emphasis and non-Japanese words
in a phonetical manner.
- QFont::Hangul - is a Korean script consisting of alphabetic components.
- QFont::Bopomofo - is a phonetic alphabet for Chinese (mainly Mandarin).
- QFont::Yi - (also called Cuan or Wei) is a syllabary used to write
the Yi language of Southwestern China, Myanmar, Laos, and Vietnam.
Additional scripts that do not fit well into the script categories above:
- QFont::Ethiopic - is a syllabary used by several Central East African languages.
- QFont::Cherokee - is a left-to-right syllabic script used to write
the Cherokee language.
- QFont::CanadianAboriginal - consists of the syllabics used by some
Canadian aboriginal societies.
- QFont::Mongolian - is the traditional (and recently reintroduced)
script used to write Mongolian.
Symbols:
- QFont::CurrencySymbols - contains currency symbols not encoded in other scripts.
- QFont::LetterlikeSymbols - consists of symbols derived from
ordinary letters of an alphabetical script.
- QFont::NumberForms - are provided for compatibility with other
existing character sets.
- QFont::MathematicalOperators - consists of encodings for operators,
relations and other symbols like arrows used in a mathematical context.
- QFont::TechnicalSymbols - contains representations for control
codes, the space symbol, APL symbols and other symbols
mainly used in the context of electronic data processing.
- QFont::GeometricSymbols - covers block elements and geometric shapes.
- QFont::MiscellaneousSymbols - consists of a heterogeneous collection
of symbols that do not fit any other Unicode character
block, e.g. Dingbats.
- QFont::EnclosedAndSquare - is provided for compatibility with some
East Asian standards.
- QFont::Braille - is an international writing system used by blind
people. This script encodes the 256 eight-dot patterns with
the 64 six-dot patterns as a subset.
- QFont::Unicode - includes all the above scripts.
The values below are provided for completeness and must not be
used in user programs.
- QFont::HanX11 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinBasic - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinExtendedA_2 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinExtendedA_3 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinExtendedA_4 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinExtendedA_14 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LatinExtendedA_15 - For internal use only.
- QFont::LastPrivateScript - For internal use only.
- QFont::NScripts - For internal use only.
- QFont::NoScript - For internal use only.
- QFont::UnknownScript - For internal use only.
QFont::StyleHint
Style hints are used by the font
matching algorithm to find an appropriate default family
if a selected font family is not available.
- QFont::AnyStyle - leaves the font matching algorithm to choose the
family. This is the default.
- QFont::SansSerif - the font matcher prefer sans serif fonts.
- QFont::Helvetica - is a synonym for SansSerif.
- QFont::Serif - the font matcher prefers serif fonts.
- QFont::Times - is a synonym for Serif.
- QFont::TypeWriter - the font matcher prefers fixed pitch fonts.
- QFont::Courier - a synonym for TypeWriter.
- QFont::OldEnglish - the font matcher prefers decorative fonts.
- QFont::Decorative - is a synonym for OldEnglish.
- QFont::System - the font matcher prefers system fonts.
QFont::StyleStrategy
The style strategy tells the font
matching algorithm what type of fonts should be used to
find an appropriate default family.
The following strategies are available:
- QFont::PreferDefault - the default style strategy. It does not prefer
any type of font.
- QFont::PreferBitmap - prefers bitmap fonts (as opposed to outline
fonts). On X11, this will cause Qt to disregard fonts from
the Xft font extension.
- QFont::PreferDevice - prefers device fonts.
- QFont::PreferOutline - prefers outline fonts (as opposed to bitmap fonts).
- QFont::ForceOutline - forces the use of outline fonts.
- QFont::NoAntialias - don't antialias the fonts.
- QFont::PreferAntialias - antialias if possible.
Any of these may be OR-ed with one of these flags:
- QFont::PreferMatch - prefer an exact match. The font matcher will try to
use the exact font size that has been specified.
- QFont::PreferQuality - prefer the best quality font. The font matcher
will use the nearest standard point size that the font
supports.
QFont::Weight
Qt uses a weighting scale from 0 to 99 similar to, but not the
same as, the scales used in Windows or CSS. A weight of 0 is
ultralight, whilst 99 will be an extremely black.
This enum contains the predefined font weights:
- QFont::Light - 25
- QFont::Normal - 50
- QFont::DemiBold - 63
- QFont::Bold - 75
- QFont::Black - 87
Member Function Documentation
QFont::QFont ()
Constructs a font object that uses the application's default font.
See also QApplication::setFont() and QApplication::font().
QFont::QFont ( const QString & family, int pointSize = 12, int weight = Normal, bool italic = FALSE )
Constructs a font object with the specified family, pointSize, weight and italic settings.
If pointSize is <= 0 it is set to 1.
The family name may optionally also include a foundry name,
e.g. "Helvetica [Cronyx]". (The Qt 2.x syntax, i.e.
"Cronyx-Helvetica", is also supported.) If the family is
available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn't
specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn't
available a family will be set using the font
matching algorithm.
See also Weight, setFamily(), setPointSize(), setWeight(), setItalic(), setStyleHint() and QApplication::font().
QFont::QFont ( const QFont & font )
Constructs a font that is a copy of font.
QFont::~QFont ()
Destroys the font object and frees all allocated resources.
bool QFont::bold () const
Returns TRUE if weight() is a value greater than QFont::Normal; otherwise returns FALSE.
See also weight(), setBold() and QFontInfo::bold().
int QFont::deciPointSize () const [protected]
Returns the point size in 1/10ths of a point.
The returned value will be -1 if the font size has been specified
in pixels.
See also pointSize() and pointSizeFloat().
QString QFont::defaultFamily () const
Returns the family name that corresponds to the current style
hint.
See also StyleHint, styleHint() and setStyleHint().
QFont QFont::defaultFont () [static]
This function is obsolete. It is provided to keep old source working. We strongly advise against using it in new code.
Please use QApplication::font() instead.
bool QFont::dirty () const [protected]
Returns TRUE if the font attributes have been changed and the font
has to be (re)loaded; otherwise returns FALSE.
bool QFont::exactMatch () const
Returns TRUE if a window system font exactly matching the settings
of this font is available.
See also QFontInfo.
QString QFont::family () const
Returns the requested font family name, i.e. the name set in the
constructor or the last setFont() call.
See also setFamily(), substitutes() and substitute().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
bool QFont::fixedPitch () const
Returns TRUE if fixed pitch has been set; otherwise returns FALSE.
See also setFixedPitch() and QFontInfo::fixedPitch().
bool QFont::fromString ( const QString & descrip )
Sets this font to match the description descrip. The description
is a comma-separated list of the font attributes, as returned by
toString().
See also toString() and operator>>().
HFONT QFont::handle () const
Returns the window system handle to the font, for low-level
access. Using this function is not portable.
void QFont::insertSubstitution ( const QString & familyName, const QString & substituteName ) [static]
Inserts the family name substituteName into the substitution
table for familyName.
See also insertSubstitutions(), removeSubstitution(), substitutions(), substitute() and substitutes().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
void QFont::insertSubstitutions ( const QString & familyName, const QStringList & substituteNames ) [static]
Inserts the list of families substituteNames into the
substitution list for familyName.
See also insertSubstitution(), removeSubstitution(), substitutions() and substitute().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
bool QFont::isCopyOf ( const QFont & f ) const
Returns TRUE if this font and f are copies of each other, i.e.
one of them was created as a copy of the other and neither has
been modified since. This is much stricter than equality.
See also operator=() and operator==().
bool QFont::italic () const
Returns TRUE if italic has been set; otherwise returns FALSE.
See also setItalic().
QString QFont::key () const
Returns the font's key, a textual representation of a font. It is
typically used as the key for a cache or dictionary of fonts.
See also QMap.
QString QFont::lastResortFamily () const
Returns the "last resort" font family name.
The current implementation tries a wide variety of common fonts,
returning the first one it finds. Is is possible that no family is
found in which case a null string is returned.
See also lastResortFont().
QString QFont::lastResortFont () const
Returns a "last resort" font name for the font matching algorithm.
This is used if the last resort family is not available. It will
always return a name, if necessary returning something like
"fixed" or "system".
The current implementation tries a wide variety of common fonts,
returning the first one it finds. The implementation may change
at any time, but this function will always return a string
containing something.
It is theoretically possible that there really isn't a
lastResortFont() in which case Qt will abort with an error
message. We have not been able to identify a case where this
happens. Please report it as a bug if
it does, preferably with a list of the fonts you have installed.
See also lastResortFamily() and rawName().
bool QFont::operator!= ( const QFont & f ) const
Returns TRUE if this font is different from f; otherwise
returns FALSE.
Two QFonts are considered to be different if their font attributes
are different. If rawMode() is enabled for both fonts, only the
family fields are compared.
See also operator==().
QFont & QFont::operator= ( const QFont & font )
Assigns font to this font and returns a reference to it.
bool QFont::operator== ( const QFont & f ) const
Returns TRUE if this font is equal to f; otherwise returns
FALSE.
Two QFonts are considered equal if their font attributes are
equal. If rawMode() is enabled for both fonts, only the family
fields are compared.
See also operator!=() and isCopyOf().
int QFont::pixelSize () const
Returns the pixel size of the font if it was set with
setPixelSize(). Returns -1 if the size was set with setPointSize()
or setPointSizeFloat().
See also setPixelSize(), pointSize(), QFontInfo::pointSize() and QFontInfo::pixelSize().
int QFont::pointSize () const
Returns the point size of the font. Returns -1 if the font size
was specified in pixels.
See also setPointSize(), deciPointSize() and pointSizeFloat().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
float QFont::pointSizeFloat () const
Returns the point size of the font. Returns -1 if the font size was
specified in pixels.
See also pointSize(), setPointSizeFloat(), pixelSize(), QFontInfo::pointSize() and QFontInfo::pixelSize().
void QFont::qwsRenderToDisk ( bool all = TRUE )
Saves the glyphs in the font that have previously been accessed as
a QPF file. If all is TRUE (the default), then before saving,
all glyphs are marked as used.
If the font is large and you are sure that only a subset of
characters will ever be required on the target device, passing
FALSE for the all parameter can save a significant amount of
disk space.
Note that this function is only applicable on Qt/Embedded.
bool QFont::rawMode () const
Returns TRUE if raw mode is used for font name matching; otherwise
returns FALSE.
See also setRawMode() and rawName().
QString QFont::rawName () const
Returns the name of the font within the underlying window system.
On Windows, this is usually just the family name of a TrueType
font. Under X, it is an XLFD (X Logical Font Description). Using
the return value of this function is usually not portable.
See also setRawName().
void QFont::removeSubstitution ( const QString & familyName ) [static]
Removes all the substitutions for familyName.
See also insertSubstitutions(), insertSubstitution(), substitutions() and substitute().
void QFont::setBold ( bool enable )
If enable is true sets the font's weight to QFont::Bold; otherwise sets the weight to QFont::Normal.
For finer boldness control use setWeight().
See also bold() and setWeight().
Examples: menu/menu.cpp and themes/metal.cpp.
void QFont::setDefaultFont ( const QFont & f ) [static]
This function is obsolete. It is provided to keep old source working. We strongly advise against using it in new code.
Please use QApplication::setFont() instead.
void QFont::setFamily ( const QString & family )
Sets the family name of the font. The name is case insensitive and
may include a foundry name.
The family name may optionally also include a foundry name,
e.g. "Helvetica [Cronyx]". (The Qt 2.x syntax, i.e.
"Cronyx-Helvetica", is also supported.) If the family is
available from more than one foundry and the foundry isn't
specified, an arbitrary foundry is chosen. If the family isn't
available a family will be set using the font
matching algorithm.
See also family(), setStyleHint() and QFontInfo.
void QFont::setFixedPitch ( bool enable )
If enable is TRUE, sets fixed pitch on; otherwise sets fixed
pitch off.
See also fixedPitch() and QFontInfo.
void QFont::setItalic ( bool enable )
If enable is TRUE, italic is set on; otherwise italic is set
off.
See also italic() and QFontInfo.
Examples: fileiconview/qfileiconview.cpp, fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp and themes/metal.cpp.
void QFont::setPixelSize ( int pixelSize )
Sets the font size to pixelSize pixels.
Using this function makes the font device dependent. Use
setPointSize() or setPointSizeFloat() to set the size of the font
in a device independent manner.
See also pixelSize().
Example: qwerty/qwerty.cpp.
void QFont::setPixelSizeFloat ( float pixelSize )
This function is obsolete. It is provided to keep old source working. We strongly advise against using it in new code.
Sets the logical pixel height of font characters when shown on
the screen to pixelSize.
void QFont::setPointSize ( int pointSize )
Sets the point size to pointSize. The point size must be
greater than zero.
See also pointSize() and setPointSizeFloat().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
void QFont::setPointSizeFloat ( float pointSize )
Sets the point size to pointSize. The point size must be
greater than zero. The requested precision may not be achieved on
all platforms.
See also pointSizeFloat(), setPointSize() and setPixelSize().
void QFont::setRawMode ( bool enable )
If enable is TRUE, turns raw mode on; otherwise turns raw mode
off. This function only has an effect under X11.
If raw mode is enabled, Qt will search for an X font with a
complete font name matching the family name, ignoring all other
values set for the QFont. If the font name matches several fonts,
Qt will use the first font returned by X. QFontInfo cannot be
used to fetch information about a QFont using raw mode (it will
return the values set in the QFont for all parameters, including
the family name).
Warning: Do not use raw mode unless you really, really need it! In
most (if not all) cases, setRawName() is a much better choice.
See also rawMode() and setRawName().
void QFont::setRawName ( const QString & name )
Sets a font by its system specific name. The function is
particularly useful under X, where system font settings (for
example X resources) are usually available in XLFD (X Logical Font
Description) form only. You can pass an XLFD as name to this
function.
In Qt 2.0 and later, a font set with setRawName() is still a
full-featured QFont. It can be queried (for example with italic())
or modified (for example with setItalic()) and is therefore also
suitable for rendering rich text.
If Qt's internal font database cannot resolve the raw name, the
font becomes a raw font with name as its family.
Note that the present implementation does not handle wildcards in
XLFDs well, and that font aliases (file fonts.alias in the font
directory on X11) are not supported.
See also rawName(), setRawMode() and setFamily().
void QFont::setStrikeOut ( bool enable )
If enable is TRUE, sets strikeout on; otherwise sets strikeout
off.
See also strikeOut() and QFontInfo.
void QFont::setStyleHint ( StyleHint hint, StyleStrategy strategy = PreferDefault )
Sets the style hint and strategy to hint and strategy,
respectively.
If these aren't set explicitly the style hint will default to
AnyStyle and the style strategy to PreferDefault.
See also StyleHint, styleHint(), StyleStrategy, styleStrategy() and QFontInfo.
Examples: desktop/desktop.cpp and fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
void QFont::setStyleStrategy ( StyleStrategy s )
Sets the style strategy for the font to s.
See also QFont::StyleStrategy.
void QFont::setUnderline ( bool enable )
If enable is TRUE, sets underline on; otherwise sets underline
off.
See also underline() and QFontInfo.
Examples: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp and menu/menu.cpp.
void QFont::setWeight ( int weight )
Sets the weight the font to weight, which should be a value
from the QFont::Weight enumeration.
See also weight() and QFontInfo.
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
bool QFont::strikeOut () const
Returns TRUE if strikeout has been set; otherwise returns FALSE.
See also setStrikeOut() and QFontInfo::strikeOut().
StyleHint QFont::styleHint () const
Returns the StyleHint.
The style hint affects the font
matching algorithm. See QFont::StyleHint for the list
of strategies.
See also setStyleHint(), QFont::StyleStrategy and QFontInfo::styleHint().
StyleStrategy QFont::styleStrategy () const
Returns the StyleStrategy.
The style strategy affects the font
matching algorithm. See QFont::StyleStrategy for the
list of strategies.
See also setStyleHint() and QFont::StyleHint.
QString QFont::substitute ( const QString & familyName ) [static]
Returns the first family name to be used whenever familyName is
specified. The lookup is case insensitive.
If there is no substitution for familyName, familyName is
returned.
To obtain a list of substitutions use substitutes().
See also setFamily(), insertSubstitutions(), insertSubstitution() and removeSubstitution().
QStringList QFont::substitutes ( const QString & familyName ) [static]
Returns a list of family names to be used whenever familyName
is specified. The lookup is case insensitive.
If there is no substitution for familyName, an empty list is
returned.
See also substitute(), insertSubstitutions(), insertSubstitution() and removeSubstitution().
Example: fonts/simple-qfont-demo/viewer.cpp.
QStringList QFont::substitutions () [static]
Returns a sorted list of substituted family names.
See also insertSubstitution(), removeSubstitution() and substitute().
QString QFont::toString () const
Returns a description of the font. The description is a
comma-separated list of the attributes, perfectly suited for use
in QSettings.
See also fromString() and operator<<().
bool QFont::underline () const
Returns TRUE if underline has been set; otherwise returns FALSE.
See also setUnderline() and QFontInfo::underline().
int QFont::weight () const
Returns the weight of the font which is one of the enumerated
values from QFont::Weight.
See also setWeight(), Weight and QFontInfo.
Related Functions
Writes the font font to the data stream s. (toString()
writes to a text stream.)
See also Format of the QDataStream operators.
Reads the font font from the data stream s. (fromString()
reads from a text stream.)
See also Format of the QDataStream operators.
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