shithub: freetype+ttf2subf

Download patch

ref: 81445c034aca36040b6311dc71a2cbed9548b262
parent: a41e560b213d72f36c37b7b25960839de7d29fd0
author: Alexei Podtelezhnikov <apodtele@gmail.com>
date: Sat Jun 22 18:54:57 EDT 2019

Doc polishing.

git/fs: mount .git/fs: mount/attach disallowed
--- a/include/freetype/ftglyph.h
+++ b/include/freetype/ftglyph.h
@@ -210,7 +210,7 @@
    *
    *   As the outline is extracted from a glyph slot, its coordinates are
    *   expressed normally in 26.6 pixels, unless the flag @FT_LOAD_NO_SCALE
-   *   was used in @FT_Load_Glyph() or @FT_Load_Char().
+   *   was used in @FT_Load_Glyph or @FT_Load_Char.
    *
    *   The outline's tables are always owned by the object and are destroyed
    *   with it.
--- a/include/freetype/ftimage.h
+++ b/include/freetype/ftimage.h
@@ -975,7 +975,8 @@
    *   FT_Raster_Params
    *
    * @description:
-   *   A structure to hold the arguments used by a raster's render function.
+   *   A structure to hold the parameters used by a raster's render function,
+   *   passed as an argument to @FT_Outline_Render.
    *
    * @fields:
    *   target ::
--- a/include/freetype/ftoutln.h
+++ b/include/freetype/ftoutln.h
@@ -466,8 +466,6 @@
    *
    * @description:
    *   Render an outline within a bitmap using the current scan-convert.
-   *   This function uses an @FT_Raster_Params structure as an argument,
-   *   allowing advanced features like direct composition, translucency, etc.
    *
    * @input:
    *   library ::
@@ -485,8 +483,10 @@
    *   FreeType error code.  0~means success.
    *
    * @note:
-   *   You should know what you are doing and how @FT_Raster_Params works to
-   *   use this function.
+   *   This advanced function uses @FT_Raster_Params as an argument,
+   *   allowing FreeType rasterizer to be used for direct composition,
+   *   translucency, etc.  You should know how to set up @FT_Raster_Params
+   *   for this function to work.
    *
    *   The field `params.source` will be set to `outline` before the scan
    *   converter is called, which means that the value you give to it is