Pango Status Report #4 10 Mar 2000 ====================================== General news: Karl Koehler has contributed a Arabic shaper. It currently depends on having a Unicode-encoded font available which includes the Arabic Presentation Forms glyphs in the range U+FE70 - U+FEFC. Recent progress: Most of the work I've done recently in Pango has involved moving much of the driver code in examples/viewer.c into PangoLayout: an object to encapsulate all the work of laying out the paragraph. http://www.pango.org/api/pango-layout-objects.html examples/viewer.c has gotten much shorter as a result; using Pango should be a relatively simple process now. This work was inspired by a realization of just how painful moving GTK+ over to Pango was going to be without this abstraction. Releases: Pango-0.8 is on available from www.pango.org. RPM's of pango, libunicode and libfribidi are also there. TODO highlights: The projects I intend to tackle next are: - Make a branch of GTK+, start seeing how Pango works out in real life. (Some parts of this, such as the Text widget and input in general, are major projects, so I don't expect to have this work hit the main branch of GTK+ for a while yet.) - Clean up the shaping portion to correspond to the changes I made to the itemization portion. This will involve rethinking the PangoItem structure a bit. - Improve the attribute handling in PangoLayout. (Will also involve some changes to PangoItem) Some interesting projects that other people might want to consider: [ Would be the same as as last week, but Karl tackled the Arabic shaper, so it is shorter. Feel free to send me more suggestions. ] - Write a libart based font-system and renderer to go along with the X based one. It would be good to have an idea about how well the interfaces work with something other than X before we get too far along. (Alternatively, write a FreeType-based font-system and renderer to go along with the X-based one.) - Write a shaping engine for whatever language you are interested in. Misc stuff: XFree86 4.0 was released this week. This provides a number of significant enhancements relevant to Pango: - Inclusion of a number of Unicode-encoded fonts. (The range of characters in these is somewhat limited, but better than the previous standard X fonts.) - Standard TrueType font renderer - Optimizations for loading the metrics of large fonts. Owen Taylor