(You may browse this at https://github.com/ocornut/imgui/blob/master/docs/FONTS.md or view this file with any Markdown viewer)
The code in imgui.cpp embeds a copy of 'ProggyClean.ttf' (by Tristan Grimmer), a 13 pixels high, pixel-perfect font used by default. We embed it in the source code so you can use Dear ImGui without any file system access. ProggyClean does not scale smoothly, therefore it is recommended that you load your own file when using Dear ImGui in an application aiming to look nice and wanting to support multiple resolutions.
You may also load external .TTF/.OTF files. In the misc/fonts/ folder you can find a few suggested fonts, provided as a convenience.
Also read the FAQ: https://www.dearimgui.org/faq (there is a Fonts section!)
## Readme First
Metrics/Debugger
window (available in Demo>Tools
) to browse your fonts and understand what's going on if you have an issue. You can also reach it in Demo->Tools->Style Editor->Fonts
. The same information are also available in the Style Editor under Fonts.All loaded fonts glyphs are rendered into a single texture atlas ahead of time. Calling either of io.Fonts->GetTexDataAsAlpha8()
, io.Fonts->GetTexDataAsRGBA32()
or io.Fonts->Build()
will build the atlas.
Make sure your font ranges data are persistent (available during the calls to GetTexDataAsAlpha8()
/GetTexDataAsRGBA32()/
Build()`.
Use C++11 u8"my text" syntax to encode literal strings as UTF-8. e.g.:
u8"hello"
u8"こんにちは" // this will be encoded as UTF-8
See FAQ entry.
Load default font:
ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
Load .TTF/.OTF file with:
ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels);
If you get an assert stating "Could not load font file!", your font filename is likely incorrect. Read "About filenames" carefully.
Load multiple fonts:
// Init
ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
ImFont* font1 = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels);
ImFont* font2 = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("anotherfont.otf", size_pixels);
// In application loop: select font at runtime
ImGui::Text("Hello"); // use the default font (which is the first loaded font)
ImGui::PushFont(font2);
ImGui::Text("Hello with another font");
ImGui::PopFont();
For advanced options create a ImFontConfig structure and pass it to the AddFont() function (it will be copied internally):
ImFontConfig config;
config.OversampleH = 2;
config.OversampleV = 1;
config.GlyphExtraSpacing.x = 1.0f;
ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, &config);
Combine multiple fonts into one:
// Load a first font
ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
// Add character ranges and merge into the previous font
// The ranges array is not copied by the AddFont* functions and is used lazily
// so ensure it is available at the time of building or calling GetTexDataAsRGBA32().
static const ImWchar icons_ranges[] = { 0xf000, 0xf3ff, 0 }; // Will not be copied by AddFont* so keep in scope.
ImFontConfig config;
config.MergeMode = true;
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("DroidSans.ttf", 18.0f, &config, io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesJapanese()); // Merge into first font
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("fontawesome-webfont.ttf", 18.0f, &config, icons_ranges); // Merge into first font
io.Fonts->Build();
Add a fourth parameter to bake specific font ranges only:
// Basic Latin, Extended Latin
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, NULL, io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesDefault());
// Default + Selection of 2500 Ideographs used by Simplified Chinese
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, NULL, io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesChineseSimplifiedCommon());
// Default + Hiragana, Katakana, Half-Width, Selection of 1946 Ideographs
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("font.ttf", size_pixels, NULL, io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesJapanese());
See Using Custom Glyph Ranges section to create your own ranges.
Example loading and using a Japanese font:
ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("NotoSansCJKjp-Medium.otf", 20.0f, NULL, io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesJapanese());
ImGui::Text(u8"こんにちは!テスト %d", 123);
if (ImGui::Button(u8"ロード"))
{
// do stuff
}
ImGui::InputText("string", buf, IM_ARRAYSIZE(buf));
ImGui::SliderFloat("float", &f, 0.0f, 1.0f);
(settings: Dark style (left), Light style (right) / Font: NotoSansCJKjp-Medium, 20px / Rounding: 5)
Font Atlas too large?
Some solutions:
ImFontGlyphRangesBuilder
for this purpose and rebuilding your atlas between frames when new characters are needed. This will be the biggest win!font_config.OversampleH = 2
, this will largely reduce your texture size.
Note that while OversampleH = 2 looks visibly very close to 3 in most situations, with OversampleH = 1 the quality drop will be noticeable.io.Fonts.TexDesiredWidth
to specify a texture width to minimize texture height (see comment in ImFontAtlas::Build()
function).io.Fonts.Flags |= ImFontAtlasFlags_NoPowerOfTwoHeight;
to disable rounding the texture height to the next power of two.#define IMGUI_USE_WCHAR32
in your imconfig.h
.Using an icon font (such as FontAwesome or OpenFontIcons) is an easy and practical way to use icons in your Dear ImGui application. A common pattern is to merge the icon font within your main font, so you can embed icons directly from your strings without having to change fonts back and forth.
To refer to the icon UTF-8 codepoints from your C++ code, you may use those headers files created by Juliette Foucaut: https://github.com/juliettef/IconFontCppHeaders.
So you can use ICON_FA_SEARCH
as a string that will render as a "Search" icon.
Example Setup:
// Merge icons into default tool font
#include "IconsFontAwesome.h"
ImGuiIO& io = ImGui::GetIO();
io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
ImFontConfig config;
config.MergeMode = true;
config.GlyphMinAdvanceX = 13.0f; // Use if you want to make the icon monospaced
static const ImWchar icon_ranges[] = { ICON_MIN_FA, ICON_MAX_FA, 0 };
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf", 13.0f, &config, icon_ranges);
Example Usage:
// Usage, e.g.
ImGui::Text("%s among %d items", ICON_FA_SEARCH, count);
ImGui::Button(ICON_FA_SEARCH " Search");
// C string _literals_ can be concatenated at compilation time, e.g. "hello" " world"
// ICON_FA_SEARCH is defined as a string literal so this is the same as "A" "B" becoming "AB"
See Links below for other icons fonts and related tools.
Here's an application using icons ("Avoyd", https://www.avoyd.com):
ImGuiFreeTypeBuilderFlags_LoadColor
flag.IMGUI_USE_WCHAR32
.io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("../../../imgui_dev/data/fonts/NotoSans-Regular.ttf", 16.0f);
static ImWchar ranges[] = { 0x1, 0x1FFFF, 0 };
static ImFontConfig cfg;
cfg.OversampleH = cfg.OversampleV = 1;
cfg.MergeMode = true;
cfg.FontBuilderFlags |= ImGuiFreeTypeBuilderFlags_LoadColor;
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("C:\\Windows\\Fonts\\seguiemj.ttf", 16.0f, &cfg, ranges);
You can use the ImFontGlyphRangesBuilder
helper to create glyph ranges based on text input. For example: for a game where your script is known, if you can feed your entire script to it and only build the characters the game needs.
ImVector<ImWchar> ranges;
ImFontGlyphRangesBuilder builder;
builder.AddText("Hello world"); // Add a string (here "Hello world" contains 7 unique characters)
builder.AddChar(0x7262); // Add a specific character
builder.AddRanges(io.Fonts->GetGlyphRangesJapanese()); // Add one of the default ranges
builder.BuildRanges(&ranges); // Build the final result (ordered ranges with all the unique characters submitted)
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("myfontfile.ttf", size_in_pixels, NULL, ranges.Data);
io.Fonts->Build(); // Build the atlas while 'ranges' is still in scope and not deleted.
As an alternative to rendering colorful glyphs using imgui_freetype with ImGuiFreeTypeBuilderFlags_LoadColor
, you may allocate your own space in the texture atlas and write yourself into it. (This is a BETA api, use if you are familiar with dear imgui and with your rendering backend)
ImFontAtlas::AddCustomRect()
and ImFontAtlas::AddCustomRectFontGlyph()
api to register rectangles that will be packed into the font atlas texture. Register them before building the atlas, then call Build()`.ImFontAtlas::GetCustomRectByIndex(int)
to query the position/size of your rectangle within the texture, and blit/copy any graphics data of your choice into those rectangles.// Add font, then register two custom 13x13 rectangles mapped to glyph 'a' and 'b' of this font
ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontDefault();
int rect_ids[2];
rect_ids[0] = io.Fonts->AddCustomRectFontGlyph(font, 'a', 13, 13, 13+1);
rect_ids[1] = io.Fonts->AddCustomRectFontGlyph(font, 'b', 13, 13, 13+1);
// Build atlas
io.Fonts->Build();
// Retrieve texture in RGBA format
unsigned char* tex_pixels = NULL;
int tex_width, tex_height;
io.Fonts->GetTexDataAsRGBA32(&tex_pixels, &tex_width, &tex_height);
for (int rect_n = 0; rect_n < IM_ARRAYSIZE(rect_ids); rect_n++)
{
int rect_id = rects_ids[rect_n];
if (const ImFontAtlas::CustomRect* rect = io.Fonts->GetCustomRectByIndex(rect_id))
{
// Fill the custom rectangle with red pixels (in reality you would draw/copy your bitmap data here!)
for (int y = 0; y < rect->Height; y++)
{
ImU32* p = (ImU32*)tex_pixels + (rect->Y + y) * tex_width + (rect->X);
for (int x = rect->Width; x > 0; x--)
*p++ = IM_COL32(255, 0, 0, 255);
}
}
}
Then load the font with:
ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontFromMemoryCompressedTTF(compressed_data, compressed_data_size, size_pixels, ...);
or
ImFont* font = io.Fonts->AddFontFromMemoryCompressedBase85TTF(compressed_data_base85, size_pixels, ...);
Please note that many new C/C++ users have issues their files because the filename they provide is wrong.
Two things to watch for:
Properties > General > Debugging > Working Directory
. People assume that their execution will start from the root folder of the project, where by default it oftens start from the folder where object or executable files are stored.
```cpp
// Relative filename depends on your Working Directory when running your program!
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("MyImage01.jpg", ...);// Load from the parent folder of your Working Directory io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("../MyImage01.jpg", ...);
- In C/C++ and most programming languages if you want to use a backslash `\` within a string literal, you need to write it double backslash `\\`. At it happens, Windows uses backslashes as a path separator, so be mindful.
```cpp
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("MyFiles\MyImage01.jpg", ...); // This is INCORRECT!!
io.Fonts->AddFontFromFileTTF("MyFiles\\MyImage01.jpg", ...); // This is CORRECT
In some situations, you may also use /
path separator under Windows.
Some fonts files are available in the misc/fonts/
folder:
Roboto-Medium.ttf, by Christian Robetson
Apache License 2.0
https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Roboto
Cousine-Regular.ttf, by Steve Matteson
Digitized data copyright (c) 2010 Google Corporation.
Licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1
https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Cousine
DroidSans.ttf, by Steve Matteson
Apache License 2.0
https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/droid-sans
ProggyClean.ttf, by Tristan Grimmer
MIT License
(recommended loading setting: Size = 13.0, GlyphOffset.y = +1)
http://www.proggyfonts.net/
ProggyTiny.ttf, by Tristan Grimmer
MIT License
(recommended loading setting: Size = 10.0, GlyphOffset.y = +1)
http://www.proggyfonts.net/
Karla-Regular.ttf, by Jonathan Pinhorn
SIL OPEN FONT LICENSE Version 1.1
Pixel Perfect:
Regular:
Or use Arial Unicode or other Unicode fonts provided with Windows for full characters coverage (not sure of their licensing).