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    Can you get a list of OSX fonts somehow?

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    • D Offline
      driven
      last edited by

      hi TT,
      I did PM before I saw this, I would split it into 3 conditional block

      the first would use /usr/local/bin/fc-list
      if you revisit http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=48761&p=443899#p441686 you'll see that you don't need to grep /usr/local/bin/fc-list, because it avoids the system and X11 fonts already.

      second choose last in find /**/bin/fc-list array, for the latest X11 version

      third default to 'FontBook' it's on every mac....

      john

      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

        Isn't fc-list on every mac?

        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:

          Isn't fc-list on every mac?

          TT... don't you read PM's or the posts... [I am laughing]

          reminds me of when you answer some of your 'clients'

          The whole reason I went round in circles is fc=list has never been 'standard' on a mac.

          a lot of people use to have xcode and it came with that as part of fontconfig for X11,

          or if you have Wings3D, Gimp, Inkscape or Imagemagics you'd have it, so a few SU'ers will. but they all have FontBook it's a mac core app....

          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

            TO RECAP
            This is the fastest I can get a usable list from X11
            if I remove .split[-2] from fontPath it uses /usr/local/bin and is twice as fast, same result... so the one could be used for any fc-list installed, without hardcoding a path.

             fontPath=(`find /*/*/bin/fc-list`).split[-2]
            fontList=(`#{fontPath}  ; file family | grep \/Library\/Fonts`).split("\n").collect { |f| f.split(";")[1] }.collect { |f| f.split(",")[0].strip}.to_a.uniq.compact.sort[5..-5]
            

            the .sort[5..-5] cleans out the dot files at top and some other cruft the the bottom...
            john
            EDIT: I missed a .strip that stop them running... leading whitespace.
            on test a couple are getting through that shouldn't
            *** macFonts group Error! *** i = 38 chunk = 4 font = Bitstream Charter Error #<TypeError: reference to deleted Group> Error: #<TypeError: (eval):282:inname=': reference to deleted Group>
            (eval):299
            (eval):282
            (eval):274:in times' (eval):274

            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:

              TT... don't you read PM's or the posts... [I am laughing]

              I've become so confused on this whole topic. 😕

              @driven said:

              This is the fastest I can get a usable list from X11

              fontPath=(find ///bin/fc-list).split[-2]
              That command was very slow on my mac.

              @driven said:

              the .sort[5..-5] cleans out the dot files at top and some other cruft the the bottom...
              Can you be sure this is the same on all machines? I'm hesitant to use magic numbers.

              OSX is giving me headackes in regard to this plugin. I'm tempted to just drop it all together. Taking too much time.

              At the moment I'm looking at first attempting fc-list, if it's installed. (Might have to do a search - so I have to cache that.) Then fall back to AppleScript and FontBook - also slow so it also needs a cache list (meaning the list won't automatically keep in sync.)

              sigh

              And that's not including the crashing...

              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

                TT, maybe you want to move this, but
                I was looking for a UFT8 font filter and came across a simple test code for checking console encoding.

                I thought Ruby Console was UFT8, but it's not?

                I made a little test script, and ran it both from console and from plugins.
                same result from both...

                >  msg = (`perl -Mcharnames=;full -CS -wle 'print "\N{EURO SIGN}"'`).to_s
                 puts msg
                 rply = (`locale`).to_s
                 puts rply
                 result = UI.messagebox msg, MB_YESNO
                 if result == 6 # Yes
                   UI.messagebox("Sketchup dosen't use UFT8, it uses \n" + rply)
                 end
                N{EURO SIGN}
                LANG=
                LC_COLLATE="C"
                LC_CTYPE="C"
                LC_MESSAGES="C"
                LC_MONETARY="C"
                LC_NUMERIC="C"
                LC_TIME="C"
                LC_ALL=
                1
                

                for comparison Terminal.app results

                %(#008000)[johns_iMac at upstairs in ~
                $ locale
                LANG="en_US"
                LC_COLLATE="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_CTYPE="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_MESSAGES="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_MONETARY="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_NUMERIC="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_TIME="en_US.UTF-8"
                LC_ALL="en_US.UTF-8"
                johns_iMac at upstairs in ~
                $ perl -Mcharnames=:full -CS -wle 'print "\N{EURO SIGN}"'
                €]
                john

                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

                  It's UTF-8.

                  Test example:
                  'ø'.unpack('C*')

                  Returns:
                  [195, 184]

                  Which is the correct byte values in UTF-8 encoding.

                  195 indicate the Latin1 page 184 points to ø on that page.

                  Don't know what the data you got from them commands where. But just by looking at the test data byte per byte you can tell it's 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

                    yes that does return correctly,
                    which is why I can't understand why some thing get lost in transition...
                    same font Stix(NON-Unicde)
                    Top happens from Ruby Console as well as WebDialogs
                    Bellow is the Built in Tool
                    john

                    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

                      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 Offline
                          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...

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                                    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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