systemfonts is a package that locates installed fonts. It uses the system-native libraries on Mac (CoreText) and Linux (FontConfig), and uses Freetype to parse the fonts in the registry on Windows.
systemfonts is available from CRAN using
install.packages('systemfonts')
. It is however still under
development and you can install the development version using
devtools.
# install.packages('pak')
::pak('r-lib/systemfonts') pak
The main use of this package is to locate font files based on family and style:
library(systemfonts)
match_fonts('Avenir', italic = TRUE)
#> path index features
#> 1 /System/Library/Fonts/Avenir.ttc 1
This function returns the path to the file holding the font, as well as the 0-based index of the font in the file.
It is also possible to get a data.frame of all available fonts:
system_fonts()
#> # A tibble: 916 × 9
#> path index name family style weight width italic monospace
#> <chr> <int> <chr> <chr> <chr> <ord> <ord> <lgl> <lgl>
#> 1 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Dash ultra… norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 2 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Bold bold norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 3 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Bold… bold norm… TRUE FALSE
#> 4 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Ital… normal norm… TRUE FALSE
#> 5 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Light light norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 6 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Ligh… light norm… TRUE FALSE
#> 7 /Users/thomas/fonts/Q… 0 Quic… Quick… Regu… normal norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 8 /Users/thomas/fonts/R… 0 Rubi… Rubik… Regu… normal norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 9 /System/Library/Fonts… 2 Rock… Rockw… Bold bold norm… FALSE FALSE
#> 10 /Users/thomas/Library… 0 Open… Open … Ligh… normal norm… TRUE FALSE
#> # ℹ 906 more rows
Further, you can query additional information about fonts and
specific glyphs, if that is of interest using the
font_info()
and glyph_info()
functions.
While the package was created to provide transparent access to fonts installed on the system, it has grown to also provide ways to work with font files not part of the system installation. This is especially beneficial if you are running code on a system where you don’t have administrator rights and need to use a custom font.
systemfonts provide the add_fonts()
function which takes
a vector of file paths and add these to the lookup database without
installing them. Further, systemfonts automatically looks in the
./fonts
and ~/fonts
folders and adds any font
files located there during startup. This means that you can distribute a
script along with a fonts directory and have those fonts automatically
available during execution of the script.
In addition to the above, systemfonts also provides access to online font repositories such as Google Fonts and can search and download from these, automatically adding the downloaded fonts to the lookup database.
All these functionalities are condensed into a single function,
require_font()
, which allows you to state a font dependency
inside a script. The function will first look for the font on the
system, and failing that, will try to fetch it from an online
repository. If that fails it will either throw an error or remap the
font to another of the developers choosing.
While getting this information in R is nice, the intended use is mostly through compiled code so that graphic devices can easily locate relevant font files etc.
In order to use functions from systemfonts in C(++) code your package
should list systemfonts in the LinkingTo
field in the
DESCRIPTION
file. Once this is done you can now
#include <systemfonts.h>
in your code and use the
provided functions. Look into the inst/include/systemfonts.h
file to familiarise yourself with the C API.
systemfonts will always try to find a font for you, even if none exist with the given family name or style. How it resolves this is system specific and should not be relied on, but it can be expected that a valid font file is always returned no matter the input.
A few special aliases exist that behaves predictably but system dependent:
""
and "sans"
return Helvetica on
Mac, Arial on Windows, and the default sans-serif font on Linux
(DejaVu Sans on Ubuntu)"serif"
return Times on Mac, Times New
Roman on Windows, and the default serif font on Linux (DejaVu
Serif on Ubuntu)"mono"
return Courier on Mac, Courier
New on Windows, and the default mono font on Linux (DejaVu
Mono on Ubuntu)"emoji"
return Apple Color Emoji on Mac,
Segoe UI Emoji on Windows, and the default emoji font on Linux
(Noto Color on Ubuntu)Please note that the ‘systemfonts’ project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.