love.graphics.newFont
Creates a new Font from a TrueType Font or BMFont file. Created fonts are not cached, in that calling this function with the same arguments will always create a new Font object.
All variants which accept a filename can also accept a Data object instead.
This function can be slow if it is called repeatedly, such as from love.update or love.draw. If you need to use a specific resource often, create it once and store it somewhere it can be reused! |
Contents
Function
Create a new BMFont or TrueType font.
Synopsis
font = love.graphics.newFont( filename )
Arguments
string filename
- The filepath to the BMFont or TrueType font file.
Returns
Font font
- A Font object which can be used to draw text on screen.
Notes
If the file is a TrueType font, it will be size 12. Use the variant below to create a TrueType font with a custom size.
Function
Create a new TrueType font.
Synopsis
font = love.graphics.newFont( filename, size )
Arguments
Returns
Font font
- A Font object which can be used to draw text on screen.
Function
Create a new BMFont.
Synopsis
font = love.graphics.newFont( filename, imagefilename )
Arguments
string filename
- The filepath to the BMFont file.
string imagefilename
- The filepath to the BMFont's image file. If this argument is omitted, the path specified inside the BMFont file will be used.
Returns
Font font
- A Font object which can be used to draw text on screen.
Function
Create a new instance of the default font (Vera Sans) with a custom size.
Synopsis
font = love.graphics.newFont( size )
Arguments
number size (12)
- The size of the font in pixels.
Returns
Font font
- A Font object which can be used to draw text on screen.
Examples
Use newFont to draw a custom styled text
-- Create a ttf file font with a custom size of 20 pixels.
mainFont = love.graphics.newFont("anyfont.ttf", 20)
function love.draw()
-- Setting the font so that it is used when drawning the string.
love.graphics.setFont(mainFont)
-- Draws "Hello world!" at position x: 100, y: 200 with the custom font applied.
love.graphics.print("Hello world!", 100, 200)
end
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