Converting LogFont height to Font size in points

2020-07-14 05:16发布

问题:

I have a LOGFONT structure. Now all i'd like to do is get the associated font size in points from the LOGFONT height.

回答1:

When the mapping mode is mm_Text (which it usually is), and when the lfHeight field is positive, it already gives the height in points. When it's negative, the units are pixels. MSDN for LogFont gives you the formula to convert between them:

lfHeight = -MulDiv(PointSize, GetDeviceCaps(hDC, LOGPIXELSY), 72);

There are 72 points per inch. GetDeviceCaps tells you the number of pixels per inch on a given device. Invert the formula to get pixels from points:

PointSize := MulDiv(-lfHeight, 72, GetDeviceCaps(hDC, LogPixelsY);

The important thing to realize here is that you need a device context. Font sizes don't exist independently of the media they appear on. The pixel height of a font on the screen will be different from the pixel height of a font on a printer. Use the Handle property of whatever canvas you're planning on drawing to.



回答2:

I find this a bit confusing, as well. Here are a few things that I háve learned. ;)

  1. Examine the two low-order bits of lfPitchAndFamily to determine the font type.
  2. For fixed-pitch fonts, use GetTextMetrics and the TEXTMETRIC structure.
  3. For variable-pitch fonts (true-type, etc), use GetOutlineTextMetrics and the OUTLINETEXTMETRIC structure. Be sure you have the structure aligned properly. Also, the structure is variable-sized. Call the function once to get the size, allocate space, then call the function again to fill the structure.
  4. From there, you can find proper ascent, descent, and other size-related information.

Keep in mind that they are recommended values and not all display routines will use them properly. For example, I am in the process of figuring out a correct method of determining the required height of a dialog box static control for a given string of text. It does not appear that Microsoft has followed their own documentation. ;) Not that the documentation is all that clear or complete, to begin with.