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    Can you get a list of OSX fonts somehow?

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    • thomthomT Offline
      thomthom
      last edited by

      hm... I've not have any problems with it.

      Do you see this in the 3d text plugin I sent you?

      Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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      • D Offline
        driven
        last edited by

        @thomthom said:

        Do you see this in the 3d text plugin I sent you?

        Top one... I was being discrete

        ` > a = "2撖죺".unpack('C*')
        b = a.pack('C*')
        c = puts a.inspect
        puts b.inspect

        [50, 230, 146, 150, 236, 163, 186]
        "2撖죺"
        nil`
        the puts should read [0, 50, 100, 150, 200, 250] "2撖죺"

        learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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        • TIGT Online
          TIG Moderator
          last edited by

          Why are you using "C*" in the unpack and pack - doesn't that extract a character as an unsigned integer.
          Shouldn't it be "U*" - which extracts UTF-8 characters as unsigned integers ?

          TIG

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          • thomthomT Offline
            thomthom
            last edited by

            Because I actually want to see each byte. Not the Unicode ID.

            Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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            • thomthomT Offline
              thomthom
              last edited by

              @driven said:

              the puts should read [0, 50, 100, 150, 200, 250] "2撖죺"

              ?
              Where are these numbers from?

              Why are you expecting a NULL byte? (That's usually a string termination in C.)

              Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
              List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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              • D Offline
                driven
                last edited by

                I think this may be the root of my issues
                if you unpack(C), then pack(U) sh*t happens

                > a = "2撖죺".unpack('C*') b = a.pack('U*') c = puts a.inspect puts b.inspect [50, 230, 146, 150, 236, 163, 186] "2撖죺" nil
                and visa-versa
                > a = "2撖죺".unpack('U*') b = a.pack('C*') c = puts a.inspect puts b.inspect [50, 25750, 51450] "2\226\372" nil
                I think the first is happening somewhere

                learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                • D Offline
                  driven
                  last edited by

                  font = Arial Unicode MS
                  SU Top again
                  WD bottom
                  look familiar

                  learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                  • D Offline
                    driven
                    last edited by

                    @thomthom said:

                    Where are these numbers from?

                    Link Preview Image
                    Pack and unpack bytes to strings

                    I need to write a function that "packs" an array of bytes (integers between 0 and 255) into a string. I also need to be able to perform the reverse operation, to get my byte array from the string t...

                    favicon

                    Code Review Stack Exchange (codereview.stackexchange.com)

                    learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                    • thomthomT Offline
                      thomthom
                      last edited by

                      @driven said:

                      @thomthom said:

                      Where are these numbers from?

                      Link Preview Image
                      Pack and unpack bytes to strings

                      I need to write a function that "packs" an array of bytes (integers between 0 and 255) into a string. I also need to be able to perform the reverse operation, to get my byte array from the string t...

                      favicon

                      Code Review Stack Exchange (codereview.stackexchange.com)

                      That's from a questions that doesn't really make sense.

                      Also:

                      @unknownuser said:

                      Seeing as JavaScript has 16-bit strings, I packed two bytes per character.

                      Two byte per character isn't UTF-8.

                      Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                      • D Offline
                        driven
                        last edited by

                        I was looking for test code and only grabbed the example, I got there from the Stackoverflow 'fix' that referred back.

                        Do these work as 3D Text on the PC...

                        I ran the full gamete of unpack().pack() scenario's in console and a mismatch is the only way to get the same results as the straight input.
                        john

                        learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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                        • Dan RathbunD Offline
                          Dan Rathbun
                          last edited by

                          @thomthom said:

                          fonts.sort! %(#008000)[# (!) Not UTF-8 compatible! But better than nothing.]

                          (1) Since this will run only on Mac, which is Unicode aware, can't you pass the list to a command shell and use the shell's built-in sort filter ??

                          For instance on WIN, in DOS command shell, you can filter output by piping it through the sort filter, thus:
                          doc_list = %x(dir "~/documents/myproject" | sort)
                          or similar.

                          You'd need to build a plain text list from the array, each element being a line, separated by " \n"

                          (2) Alternative ... build an array copy using pack, sort it, then & unpack back to strings.

                          I think I'm late posting this... you guys are posting machines!

                          I'm not here much anymore.

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                          • thomthomT Offline
                            thomthom
                            last edited by

                            If there is such a command then I'd guess that would work. But I'm not familiar with OSX terminal. Maybe John knows?

                            I can also use JS to sort it - since I'm displaying the list in a WebDialog.

                            Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                            • Dan RathbunD Offline
                              Dan Rathbun
                              last edited by

                              @thomthom said:

                              But I'm not familiar with OSX terminal.

                              Shell Scripting Primer: Command Line Primer

                              tcsh(1) OS X Manual Page[*]

                              Filename substitution

                              If a word contains any of the characters *`', ?', `` [' or {`' or begins with the character ~`' it is a candidate for filename substitution, also known as globbing''. This word is then regarded as a pattern (glob-pattern''), and replaced with an alphabetically sorted list of file names which match the pattern.

                              • Also do a Find on " ls-F", it is a built-in and supposed to be faster than " ls -F"

                              OS X Manual Page: ls command Reference

                              💭

                              I'm not here much anymore.

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                              • D Offline
                                driven
                                last edited by

                                This is probably my last effort on this.... circles,
                                but, I finally figured out find in Ruby Console, escapes, escapes, escapes...

                                THE THIRD WAY... no Font Book... no fc-list... just plain old find >> mdls... not the fastest, but not too bad.
                                inculed is Dan's tester, these all created 3D text from console, only Font Book and usr/local/bin/fc-list do that out of the can.

                                a=(`find /System/Library/Fonts\ /Library/Fonts\ ~/Library/Fonts\ \\( -name "*.ttf" -o -name "*.otf" \\) -type f`).split("\n").map! { |f| f.gsub(" ", "\\ ")} #need this or something to catch spaces in filenames
                                b=(a.collect{|x| `mdls  -name com_apple_ats_name_family -raw #{x}`}).map! { |f| f.split(",")[0]} #the other items in each array are unicode strings for other languages, if you want those use Font Book
                                c=b.map { |f| f[/[("\s]+([^"\n]+)[)"\s]+/m,1] }.uniq!.sort![2..-1] #[0] is empty, [1] is a dot file, could remove them
                                macFonts = c
                                chunksize = 1
                                chunk = 1
                                limit = macFonts.length
                                model = Sketchup.active_model
                                 
                                fsize = 1.0
                                linespacing = 1.2
                                 
                                bold = false
                                italic = false
                                thick = 0.05
                                filled = true
                                quality = 0.0
                                 
                                i = 0
                                 
                                while i < limit
                                 
                                  begin
                                    #
                                    model.start_operation("3D Fontnames (#{chunk})")
                                      #
                                      chunksize.times do |n|
                                        #
                                        break if i == limit
                                        #
                                        item = macFonts[i]
                                        grp = model.entities.add_group()
                                        grp.entities.add_3d_text( "#{item}", TextAlignCenter, "#{item}",
                                          bold, italic, fsize, quality, 0.0, filled, thick )
                                        grp.name= item
                                        grp.move!( Geom;;Transformation.new(Geom;;Vector3d.new(0,-(i*linespacing),0)) )
                                        #
                                        i += 1
                                        #
                                      end # chunk
                                      #
                                    model.commit_operation()
                                    #
                                  rescue Exception => e
                                    puts("\n*** macFonts group Error! ***")
                                    puts("  i = #{i}")
                                    puts("  chunk = #{chunk}")
                                    puts("  font = #{macFonts[i]}\n")
                                    model.abort_operation()
                                    puts("Error #<#{e.class.name}; #{e.message}>")
                                    puts(e.backtrace) if $VERBOSE
                                    raise
                                  end
                                 
                                  chunk += 1
                                 
                                end # while  
                                

                                learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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