|
Adds a font to the document.
The font name and a description of the font style is held within
the document. However the actual font itself is not added to the
document. If you wish to embed a font you should use the EmbedFont
method.
When a client opens the PDF Acrobat will attempt to find the exact
same font on the client system. If the exact font is not available
then a substitute font will be chosen using the font description
to determine the best match.
The following fonts are guaranteed to be available on every system.
- Times-Roman
- Times-Bold
- Times-Italic
- Times-BoldItalic
- Helvetica
- Helvetica-Bold
- Helvetica-Oblique
- Helvetica-BoldOblique
- Courier
- Courier-Bold
- Courier-Oblique
- Courier-BoldOblique
- Symbol
- ZapfDingbats
Additionally you can add any TrueType, OpenType or Type 1 font
that you have installed on your system. The name you should use
is the one referenced in your fonts folder. For example.
- Arial
- Arial Black
- Arial Black Italic
- ...
- Book Antiqua
- Book Antiqua Bold
- Book Antiqua Bold Italic
- Book Antiqua Italic
- ...
- Venetian301BT
- Venetian301BT Bold
- ...
The AddFont function returns the Object ID of the newly added Font
Object. Typically you will want to assign this return value to the
document Font property using code of the form.
theDoc.Font = theDoc.AddFont("Courier")
If the specified font could not be found then you will get an Object
ID of zero returned. You may wish to check for this possibility
otherwise a default font will be used.
Fonts are cached so newly added fonts will not be available to
ABCpdf until the application is restarted. If you need to dynamically
load a font you can pass this method a path to your font file. This
will add the font to the cache and make it available for use. You
should not move, rename or delete a font file which has been dynamically
loaded using this technique.
|