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How can I specify letter spacing or kerning, in a WPF TextBox?

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I'd like to modify the spacing between characters in a WPF TextBox.
Something like the letter-spacing: 5px thing that is available in CSS.
I think it is possible in XAML; what's the simplest way?

I found the "Introduction to the GlyphRun Object and Glyphs Element" document, and found it to be exceedingly unhelpful.

This is a code example from that page:

<!-- "Hello World!" with explicit character widths for proportional font -->
<Glyphs 
   FontUri             = "C:\WINDOWS\Fonts\ARIAL.TTF"
   FontRenderingEmSize = "36"
   UnicodeString       = "Hello World!"
   Indices             = ",80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80;,80"
   Fill                = "Maroon"
   OriginX             = "50"
   OriginY             = "225"
/>

The same documentation page gives this "explanation" for what the Indices property does:

enter image description here

I have no idea what any of that means. I'm also not sure that Indices is the right thing - the comment in the code speaks of "character widths" which I don't care about. I want to adjust the width between characters.

Also, there is no example for how to apply a Glyphs element to a TextBox. When I tried it, my WPF test app just crashed.


What I want to do is slightly increase the empty space that appears between drawn characters within a WPF TextBox. The text will vary in length and content. Do I have to modify the Indicies property every time there is a new character? Is there a way to say "make it 20% more space than usual, for every character".

Can anybody help me?

like image 831
Cheeso Avatar asked Apr 30 '11 17:04

Cheeso


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What do you called to the spacing between the letters?

Kerning refers to the amount of space between two letters (or other characters: Numbers, punctuation, etc.) and the process of adjusting that space to avoid awkward-looking gaps between your letters and improve legibility.

Which is the adjustment of letter-spacing within an entire block of text?

In typography, letter-spacing, also called tracking, refers to the amount of space between a group of letters to affect density in a line or block of text. Tracking is the adjustment of space for groups of letters and entire blocks of text.

What is character spacing used for?

The Purpose of Letter-Spacing The main purpose of letter-spacing is to improve the legibility and readability of the text. Words act differently depending on their size, color, and the background they are on.


2 Answers

I tried Glyphs and FontStretch and couldn't easily get the result I was looking for. I was able to come up with an approach that works for my purposes. Maybe it will work for others, as well.

<ItemsControl ItemsSource="{Binding SomeString}">
    <ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
        <ItemsPanelTemplate>
            <StackPanel Orientation="Horizontal" />
        </ItemsPanelTemplate>
    </ItemsControl.ItemsPanel>
    <ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
        <DataTemplate>
            <TextBlock Text="{Binding}" 
                       Margin="0,0,5,0"/>
        </DataTemplate>
    </ItemsControl.ItemTemplate>
</ItemsControl>

I can bind to any string and don't need to do any character width detection to set the spacing properly. The right margin is the space between the letters.

Example:

Kerning

like image 159
BrianR Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 11:09

BrianR


I found a way to have letter spacing with TextBlock class as it supports TranslateTransforms. By replacing a default PropertyChangedCallback on the TextBlock.TextProperty with a custom one, we can apply TranslateTransform to each letter in the TextBlock.

Here is a complete step-by-step coding I did:

First, we create a custom class and inherit from TextBlock like so:

using System.Windows.Controls;

namespace MyApp
{
    class SpacedLetterTextBlock : TextBlock
    {
        public SpacedLetterTextBlock() : base()
        {
        }
    }
}

Then, in XAML, we change the TextBlock to our custom class (more information can be found here):

<Window x:Class="MyApp.MainWindow"
        ...
        xmlns:app="clr-namespace:MyApp">
   <Grid>
       <app:SpacedLetterTextBlock>
           Some Text
       </app:SpacedLetterTextBlock>
   </Grid>
</Window>

Finally, before the InitializeComponent() method in the .cs code-behind file, add the OverrideMetadata method like so:

// This line of code adds our own callback method to handle any changes in the Text
//   property of the TextBlock
SpacedLetterTextBlock.TextProperty.OverrideMetadata(
    typeof(SpacedLetterTextBlock),
    new FrameworkPropertyMetadata(null,
            FrameworkPropertyMetadataOptions.AffectsRender,
            new PropertyChangedCallback(OnTextChanged)
    )
);

... and apply TranslateTransform to each letter each time TextProperty changes:

private static void OnTextChanged(DependencyObject d, DependencyPropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
    SpaceLettersOut(d);
}

// This method takes our custom text block and 'moves' each letter left or right by 
//  applying a TranslateTransform
private static void SpaceLettersOut(DependencyObject d)
{
    SpacedLetterTextBlock thisBlock = (SpacedLetterTextBlock)d;
            
    for (int i = 1; i <= thisBlock.Text.Length; i++)
    {
        // TranslateTransform supports doubles and negative numbers, so you can have
        //  whatever spacing you need - do see 'Notes' section in the answer for
        //  some limitations.
        TranslateTransform transform = new TranslateTransform(2, 0);
        TextEffect effect = new TextEffect();
        effect.Transform = transform;
        effect.PositionStart = i;
        effect.PositionCount = thisBlock.Text.Length;

        thisBlock.TextEffects.Add(effect);
        if (effect.CanFreeze)
        {
            effect.Freeze();
        }
    }
}

NOTES:

First, I am a complete novice in WPF and C#, so my answer might not be the cleanest solution available. If you have any comments on how to improve this answer, it will be greatly appreciated!

Second, I haven't tested this solution with a large number of TextBlock elements, and there (probably) is a huge performance penalty as TranslateTransform is applied to each individual letter in a TextBlock.Text.

Finally, the text of the TextBlock goes out of bounds with any positive X value for TranslateTransform. I think that you can re-calculate the width of the TextBlock and only then place it programmatically (?)

like image 39
Alisher Turubayev Avatar answered Sep 24 '22 11:09

Alisher Turubayev