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imagefontheight

(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

imagefontheightRetourne la hauteur de la police

Description

imagefontheight(GdFont|int $font): int

Retourne la hauteur de la police font en pixels.

Liste de paramètres

font

Peut être 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 pour les polices internes d'encodage Latin2 (où les plus grands nombres correspondent aux polices larges) ou une instance de GdFont retourné par imageloadfont().

Valeurs de retour

Retourne la hauteur de la police, en pixels.

Historique

Version Description
8.1.0 Le paramètre font accepte désormais une instance de GdFont et un entier; auparavant seulement un entier était accepté.

Exemples

Exemple #1 Exemple avec imagefontheight() et des polices internes

<?php
echo 'Hauteur de la police : ' . imagefontheight(4);
?>

Résultat de l'exemple ci-dessus est similaire à :

Hauteur de la police : 16

Exemple #2 Exemple avec imagefontheight() et imageloadfont()

<?php
// Chargement d'une police .gdf
$font = imageloadfont('anonymous.gdf');

echo
'Hauteur de la police : ' . imagefontheight($font);
?>

Résultat de l'exemple ci-dessus est similaire à :

Hauteur de la police : 43

Voir aussi

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User Contributed Notes 1 note

up
1
dev at numist dot net
19 years ago
This library function is very useful for variable-sized images that only contain text, like this function that I use to output error messages that accumulate and cause a fatal error in my thumbnailer:

<?php
function errimg($error) {
// $error is an array of error messages, each taking up one line
// initialization
$font_size = 2;
$text_width = imagefontwidth($font_size);
$text_height = imagefontheight($font_size);
$width = 0;
// the height of the image will be the number of items in $error
$height = count($error);

// this gets the length of the longest string, in characters to determine
// the width of the output image
for($x = 0; $x < count($error); $x++) {
if(
strlen($error[$x]) > $width) {
$width = strlen($error[$x]);
}
}

// next we turn the height and width into pixel values
$width = $width * $text_width;
$height = $height * $text_height;

// create image with dimensions to fit text, plus two extra rows and
// two extra columns for border
$im = imagecreatetruecolor($width + ( 2 * $text_width ),
$height + ( 2 * $text_height ) );
if(
$im) {
// image creation success
$text_color = imagecolorallocate($im, 233, 14, 91);
// this loop outputs the error message to the image
for($x = 0; $x < count($error); $x++) {
// imagestring(image, font, x, y, msg, color);
imagestring($im, $font_size, $text_width,
$text_height + $x * $text_height, $error[$x],
$text_color);
}
// now, render your image using your favorite image* function
// (imagejpeg, for instance)
out($im, array(), $error);
} else {
// image creation failed, so just dump the array along with extra error
$error[] = "Is GD Installed?";
die(
var_dump($error));
}
}
?>

The function expects an array of error messages to be passed in, and then outputs an image containing the contents of the array. This is especially useful if your code is contained in an html page that will display rexes if the images do not render correctly.

This function displays the array in image form with index 0 at the top, and the highest index at the bottom.

You have to write out() yourself though, see imagejpeg, imagepng, etc for good ideas on how to write a decent output function.
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