* Font dimensions needed by clients.
*/
int width, height, ascent, descent;
+
+ /*
+ * Indicates whether this font is capable of handling all glyphs
+ * (Pango fonts can do this because Pango automatically supplies
+ * missing glyphs from other fonts), or whether it would like a
+ * fallback font to cope with missing glyphs.
+ */
+ int want_fallback;
} unifont;
unifont *unifont_create(GtkWidget *widget, const char *name,
int x, int y, const wchar_t *string, int len,
int wide, int bold, int cellwidth);
+/*
+ * This function behaves exactly like the low-level unifont_create,
+ * except that as well as the requested font it also allocates (if
+ * necessary) a fallback font for filling in replacement glyphs.
+ *
+ * Return value is usable with unifont_destroy and unifont_draw_text
+ * as if it were an ordinary unifont.
+ */
+unifont *multifont_create(GtkWidget *widget, const char *name,
+ int wide, int bold,
+ int shadowoffset, int shadowalways);
+
/*
* Unified font selector dialog. I can't be bothered to do a
* proper GTK subclassing today, so this will just be an ordinary