Pango is a library for layout and rendering of text, with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout is needed; however, most of the work on Pango-1.0 was done using the GTK+ widget toolkit as a test platform. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for GTK+-2.0. Pango is designed to be modular; the core Pango layout can be used with four different font backends: - Core X windowing system fonts - Client-side fonts on X using the Xft library - Direct rendering of scalable fonts using the FreeType library - Native fonts on Microsoft backends Dynamically loaded modules then handle text layout for particular combinations of script and font backend. As well as the low level layout rendering routines, Pango includes PangoLayout, a high level driver for laying out entire blocks of text, and routines to assist in editing internationalized text. For more information about Pango, see: http://www.pango.org Dependencies ============ Pango depends on version 2.0.0 of the GLib library; more information about GLib can be found at http://www.gtk.org/. The recommended font backend for X in Pango-1.2 is the Xft backend which uses version 2 of the Xft library to manage client side fonts. Benefits of the Xft backend include, performance, support for OpenType fonts, and antialiasing. Version 2 of Xft is available from http://fontconfig.org/. Along with Xft, you'll need to install its dependency fontconfig, and possibly also the Xrender library, if that doesn't come with your system. Both of these libraries are available from the same place as fontconfig. Note that an earlier version of Xft is shipped with version of XFree86 up to 4.2. This version does not work with Pango-1.2; Pango-1.2 requires version 2 of Xft, which is present in XFree86-4.3. Both Xft and the optional PangoFT2 backend require the fontconfig library (http://www.fontconfig.org) to look up fonts. At least version 2.0.9 of the FreeType font handling library (http://www.freetype.org) is also required. If fontconfig and FreeType are not found at configure time, or FreeType is too old, then neither the Xft nor the FT2 backend is will be built. After installing fontconfig, it may be necessary to edit the fonts.conf file, found at $(sysconfdir)/fonts/fonts.conf (usually /etc/fonts/fonts.conf) to point at the fonts on your system. There is also a backend that uses core X protocol fonts. This backend only requires the standard libraries from the X window system. You should already have these installed on your system, but it's possible that you'll need to install the development environment for these libraries that your operating system vendor provides. Installation of Pango on Win32 is possible, but is not documented here. See http://www.gimp.org/~tml/win32/downloads.html. Notes ===== - By default, Pango tries to build itself so that no explicit dependency on Xft or FreeType will be introduced in apps that link to Pango. This is to avoid compatibility problems with changes in the Xft or FreeType API's or ABI's. Specifying --enable-explicit-deps or --enable-static when configuring Pango will defeat this and should be avoided if possible. License ======= Pango is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser Public License (LGPL) - see the file COPYING for details. Owen Taylor otaylor@redhat.com 8 August 2002