Read, write and generate UFOs with designspace data.
Project description
ufoProcessor
Python package based on the designSpaceDocument from fontTools.designspaceLib) specifically to process and generate instances for UFO files, glyphs and other data.
- Collect source materials
- Provide mutators for specific glyphs, font info, kerning so that other tools can generate partial instances. Either from
MutatorMath
orfonttools varlib.model
. - Support designspace format 4 with layers.
- Apply avar-like designspace bending
- Apply rules
- Generate actual UFO instances in formats 2 and 3.
- Round geometry as requested
- Try to stay up to date with fontTools
- Baseclass for tools that need access to designspace data.
Usage
The easiest way to use ufoProcessor is to call build(designspacePath)
-
documentPath: path to the designspace file.
-
outputUFOFormatVersion: integer, 2, 3. Format for generated UFOs. Note: can be different from source UFO format.
-
roundGeometry: bool, if the geometry needs to be rounded to whole integers. This affects glyphs, metrics, kerning, select font info.
-
processRules: bool, when generating UFOs, execute designspace rules as swaps.
-
logger: optional logger object.
-
documentPath: filepath to the .designspace document
-
outputUFOFormatVersion: ufo format for output, default is the current, so 3.
-
useVarlib: True if you want the geometry to be generated with
varLib.model
instead ofmutatorMath
.
Examples
Generate all the instances (using the varlib model, no rounding):
import ufoProcessor
myPath = "myDesignspace.designspace"
ufoProcessor.build(myPath)
Generate all the instances (using the varlib model, but round all the geometry to integers):
import ufoProcessor
myPath = "myDesignspace.designspace"
ufoProcessor.build(myPath, roundGeometry=True)
Generate all the instances (using the mutatormath model, no rounding):
import ufoProcessor
myPath = "myDesignspace.designspace"
ufoProcessor.build(myPath, useVarlib=False)
Generate an instance for one glyph, "A"
at width=100, weight=200
. (assuming the designspace has those axes and the masters have that glyph)
import ufoProcessor
myPath = "myDesignspace.designspace"
doc = ufoProcessor.DesignSpaceProcessor()
doc.read(myPath)
doc.loadFonts()
glyphMutator = doc.getGlyphMutator("A")
instance = glyphMutator.makeInstance(Location(width=100, weight=200)
Depending on the setting for usevarlib
, the glyphMutator
object returned by getGlyphMutator
in the example above can either be a MutatorMath.Mutator
, or a VariationModelMutator
object. That uses the fontTools.varLib.models.VariationModel
but it is wrapped and can be called as a Mutator object to generate instances. This way DesignSpaceProcessor
does not need to know much about which math model it is using.
Convert Superpolator to designspace
The ufoProcessor.sp3 module has some tools for interpreting Superpolator .sp3 documents. Not all data is migrated. But the important geometry is there. Given that Superpolator can read designspace files, there is hopefully no real need for a writer. Note that this conversion is lossy.
- Axis
- dimensions
- name
- tag
- Source
- ufo path
- familyname, stylename
- mute state (stored in lib)
- location
- Instance
- ufo path
- familyname, stylename
- stylemap names
- location
- Rules
- Simple Rules are wrapped in a conditionset.
- most of the really old Superpolator rules can't be converted. Only rules with
<
or>
operators are used.
- Some Superpolator user prefs
- Preview text
- Which axes used vertically and horizontally
Usage
# convert sp3 file to designspace
# first make a new designspace doc object
doc = DesignSpaceDocument()
# feed it to the reader
reader = SuperpolatorReader(sp3path, doc)
reader.read()
# now you can work with it, even save it
doc.write(designspacePath)
Indeed that last example comes from this convenience function:
sp3_to_designspace(sp3path, designspacePath=None)
If designspacePath = None, sp3_to_designspace will use the same path for the output, but replace the .sp3
with .designspace
extension. If the file exists it will overwrite.
Notes
- Glyph-specific masters in instances are ignored.
- Instance notes are ignored.
- Designspace geometry requires the default master to be on the default value of each axis. Superpolator handled that differently, it would find the default dynamically. So it is possible that converted designspaces need some work in terms of the basic structure. That can't be handled automatically.
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