Java Code Examples for sun.font.FontManager#preferProportionalFonts()
The following examples show how to use
sun.font.FontManager#preferProportionalFonts() .
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Example 1
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk8u-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 2
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk8u-dev-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 3
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk-1.7-annotated with Apache License 2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 4
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk8u-jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 5
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk8u_jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 6
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From openjdk-8 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 7
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From openjdk-8-source with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 8
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From hottub with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 9
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From Java8CN with Apache License 2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 10
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk1.8-source-analysis with Apache License 2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 11
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From openjdk-jdk9 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 12
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From Bytecoder with Apache License 2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 13
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From openjdk-jdk8u-backup with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 14
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From openjdk-jdk8u with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 15
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From JDKSourceCode1.8 with MIT License | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 16
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From jdk8u60 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 17
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From TencentKona-8 with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }
Example 18
Source File: GraphicsEnvironment.java From dragonwell8_jdk with GNU General Public License v2.0 | 2 votes |
/** * Indicates a preference for proportional over non-proportional (e.g. * dual-spaced CJK fonts) fonts in the mapping of logical fonts to * physical fonts. If the default mapping contains fonts for which * proportional and non-proportional variants exist, then calling * this method indicates the mapping should use a proportional variant. * <p> * The actual change in font rendering behavior resulting from a call to * this method is implementation dependent; it may have no effect at all. * The behavior may differ between font rendering in lightweight and * peered components. Since calling this method requests a * different font, clients should expect different metrics, and may need * to recalculate window sizes and layout. Therefore this method should * be called before user interface initialisation. * @since 1.5 */ public void preferProportionalFonts() { FontManager fm = FontManagerFactory.getInstance(); fm.preferProportionalFonts(); }