On my website, I want to strive for reducing the page size as much as possible. As such, on Apple devices - I want to display my site using the native San Francisco font. On all other devices, I want to display (the extremely similar) Roboto font.
What's great about Roboto is that it's locally installed with Android ... and as such, I don't want to install the font if it already exist.
What I want to do is, is what's describen in the pseudo code below
if ("San Francisco" or "Roboto" not installed locally) {
// download Robot (and preload it for super fast performance)
<link rel="preload" as="font" href="/assets/fonts/roboto.woff2" type="font/woff2" crossorigin/>
}
I totally realize in my CSS, it already has the ability to fallback to another font like so
body { font:normal 1em -apple-system,"Roboto",sans-serif;}
The problem with the CSS code above, it slow and doesn't preload.
Now yes, I guess I could just PRELOAD the Roboto font for ALL page views, but that's seems completely wasteful.
Thoughts on how I can do this?
One way to do this is through JS and the CSS Font Loading API.
You can start by trying to load the local "San Francisco" font from a FontFace instance, if it fails, load the Roboto fallbacks.
But doing so, we loose some of the advantages of link preload and we may face a Flash Of Unstyled Content.
(async () => {
const sanfrancisco = new FontFace( "San Francisco", "local('San Francisco')" );
try {
await sanfrancisco.load();
console.log( "'San Francisco' font is available on this system" );
document.fonts.add( sanfrancisco );
}
catch( err ) {
console.log( "'San Francisco' font is not available on this system" );
// use the local version
// or fallback to the online one if not available
const roboto = new FontFace( "Roboto", `local(Roboto),
url(https://fonts.gstatic.com/s/roboto/v20/KFOmCnqEu92Fr1Mu4mxKKTU1Kg.woff2)
` );
await roboto.load();
console.log( "Roboto font loaded" );
document.fonts.add( roboto );
}
document.body.classList.add( "font-loaded" ); // avoid FOUC
})();
body:not(.font-loaded) {
opacity: 0;
}
.my-font {
font-family: 'San Francisco','Roboto';
}
The following paragraph
<p class="my-font">uses either San Francisco or Roboto.</p>
This question already has answers here:
How to add some non-standard font to a website?
(21 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
I am going to use #font-face. So I copied corbel font to my directory and there it shows 4 fonts CORBEL_0.TTF , CORBELB_0.TTF , CORBELI_0.TTF , CORBELZ_0.TTF and next I copied Kozuka Gothic Pro font to my directory and there it shows 6 fonts KozGoPro-Bold.otf , KozGoPro-ExtraLight.otf , KozGoPro-Heavy.otf , KozGoPro-Light.otf , KozGoPro-Medium.otf , KozGoPro-Regular.otf
How to write src using #font-face rule?
As in example url("../../css/fonts/League_Gothic.eot") format('eot'); the format eot , is it the extension of font? Anyone give me the idea for full syntax within #font-face.
#font-face
{
font-family: corbel;
src: url('/fonts/corbel.ttf'),
url('/fonts/corbel.eot');
}
#font-face
{
font-family: Kozuka;
src: url('/fonts/Kozuka.ttf'),
url('/fonts/Kozuka.eot');
}
Like this:
#font-face {
font-family: 'Kozuka Gothic Pro';
src: url("../../css/fonts/Kozuka Gothic Pro.otf") format('truetype');
src: local("☺"),
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-Bold.otf"),
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-ExtraLight.otf") format('truetype'),
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-Heavy.otf") format('truetype'),
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-Light.otf") format('truetype');
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-Medium.otf") format('truetype')
url("../../css/fonts/KozGoPro-Regular.otf") format('truetype');
}
When I draw a text in a canvas with a typeface that is loaded via #font-face, the text doesn't show correctly. It doesn't show at all (in Chrome 13 and Firefox 5), or the typeface is wrong (Opera 11). This type of unexpected behavior occurs only at the first drawing with the typeface. After then everything works fine.
Is it the standard behavior or something?
Thank you.
PS: Following is the source code of the test case
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<title>#font-face and <canvas></title>
<style id="css">
#font-face {
font-family: 'Press Start 2P';
src: url('fonts/PressStart2P.ttf');
}
</style>
<style>
canvas, pre {
border: 1px solid black;
padding: 0 1em;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>#font-face and <canvas></h1>
<p>
Description: click the button several times, and you will see the problem.
The first line won't show at all, or with a wrong typeface even if it does.
<strong>If you have visited this page before, you may have to refresh (or reload) it.</strong>
</p>
<p>
<button id="draw">#draw</button>
</p>
<p>
<canvas width="250" height="250">
Your browser does not support the CANVAS element.
Try the latest Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari or Opera.
</canvas>
</p>
<h2>#font-face</h2>
<pre id="view-css"></pre>
<h2>Script</h2>
<pre id="view-script"></pre>
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script id="script">
var x = 30,
y = 10;
$('#draw').click(function () {
var canvas = $('canvas')[0],
ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
ctx.font = '12px "Press Start 2P"';
ctx.fillStyle = '#000';
ctx.fillText('Hello, world!', x, y += 20);
ctx.fillRect(x - 20, y - 10, 10, 10);
});
</script>
<script>
$('#view-css').text($('#css').text());
$('#view-script').text($('#script').text());
</script>
</body>
</html>
Drawing on canvas has to happen and return immediately when you call the fillText method. However, the browser has not yet loaded the font from the network, which is a background task. So it has to fall back to the font it does have available.
If you want to make sure the font is available, have some other element on the page preload it, eg.:
<div style="font-family: PressStart;">.</div>
Use this trick and bind an onerror event to an Image element.
Demo here: works on the latest Chrome.
var canvas = document.getElementById('canvas');
var ctx = canvas.getContext('2d');
var link = document.createElement('link');
link.rel = 'stylesheet';
link.type = 'text/css';
link.href = 'http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Vast+Shadow';
document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(link);
// Trick from https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2635814/
var image = new Image();
image.src = link.href;
image.onerror = function() {
ctx.font = '50px "Vast Shadow"';
ctx.textBaseline = 'top';
ctx.fillText('Hello!', 20, 10);
};
You can load fonts with the FontFace API before using it in the canvas:
const myFont = new FontFace('My Font', 'url(https://myfont.woff2)');
myFont.load().then((font) => {
document.fonts.add(font);
console.log('Font loaded');
});
The font resource myfont.woff2 is first downloaded. Once the download completes, the font is added to the document's FontFaceSet.
The specification of the FontFace API is a working draft at the time of this writing. See browser compatibility table here.
The nub of the problem is that you are trying to use the font but the browser has not loaded it yet and possibly has not even requested it. What you need is something that will load the font and give you a callback once it is loaded; once you get the callback, you know it is okay to use the font.
Look at Google's WebFont Loader; it seems like a "custom" provider and an active callback after the load would make it work.
I've never used it before, but from a quick scan of the docs you need to make a css file fonts/pressstart2p.css, like this:
#font-face {
font-family: 'Press Start 2P';
font-style: normal;
font-weight: normal;
src: local('Press Start 2P'), url('http://lemon-factory.net/reproduce/fonts/Press Start 2P.ttf') format('ttf');
}
Then add the following JS:
WebFontConfig = {
custom: { families: ['Press Start 2P'],
urls: [ 'http://lemon-factory.net/reproduce/fonts/pressstart2p.css']},
active: function() {
/* code to execute once all font families are loaded */
console.log(" I sure hope my font is loaded now. ");
}
};
(function() {
var wf = document.createElement('script');
wf.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https' : 'http') +
'://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/webfont/1/webfont.js';
wf.type = 'text/javascript';
wf.async = 'true';
var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(wf, s);
})();
What about using simple CSS to hide a div using the font like this:
CSS:
#preloadfont {
font-family: YourFont;
opacity:0;
height:0;
width:0;
display:inline-block;
}
HTML:
<body>
<div id="preloadfont">.</div>
<canvas id="yourcanvas"></canvas>
...
</body>
https://drafts.csswg.org/css-font-loading/
var myFont = new FontFace('My Font', 'url(https://myfont.woff2)');
myFont.load().then(function(font){
// with canvas, if this is ommited won't work
document.fonts.add(font);
console.log('Font loaded');
});
i've bumped into the issue when playing with it recently http://people.opera.com/patrickl/experiments/canvas/scroller/
worked around it by adding the font-family to canvas directly in the CSS, so you can just add
canvas { font-family: PressStart; }
This article sorted out my issues with lazy loaded fonts not being displayed.
How to load web fonts to avoid performance issues and speed up page loading
This helped me ...
<link rel="preload" as="font" href="assets/fonts/Maki2/fontmaki2.css" rel="stylesheet" crossorigin="anonymous">
Since I've not found any example of the actual FontFace usage, here's #Fred
Fred Bergman's answer, slightly modified
const fontUrl = 'https://fonts.gstatic.com/s/robotomono/v22/L0xuDF4xlVMF-BfR8bXMIhJHg45mwgGEFl0_Of2_ROW-AJi8SJQt.woff'
const robotoFont = new FontFace('Roboto Mono', `url(${fontUrl})`);
// Canvas variables
const canvas = document.createElement('canvas')
const ctx = canvas.getContext('2d')
robotoFont.load().then((font: FontFace) => {
// This is required
document.fonts.add(font);
// Usage example
ctx.font = `30px '${font.family}'`;
ctx.fillText("Hello World!", 10, 50);
});
Here's the compatibility table
If you want to redraw everytime a new font is loaded (and probably change the rendering) the font loading api has a nice event for that, too. I had problems with the Promise in a complete dynamic environment.
var fontFaceSet = document.fonts;
if (fontFaceSet && fontFaceSet.addEventListener) {
fontFaceSet.addEventListener('loadingdone', function () {
// Redraw something
});
} else {
// no fallback is possible without this API as a font files download can be triggered
// at any time when a new glyph is rendered on screen
}
I am not sure if this will help you, but to solve the problem with my code I simply created a for loop at the top of my Javascript which ran through all the fonts that I wanted to load. I then ran a function to clear the canvas and preload the items I wanted on the canvas. So far it has worked perfectly. That was my logic I have posted my code below:
var fontLibrary = ["Acme","Aladin","Amarante","Belgrano","CantoraOne","Capriola","CevicheOne","Chango","ChelaOne","CherryCreamSoda",
"ConcertOne","Condiment","Damion","Devonshire","FugazOne","GermaniaOne","GorditasBold","GorditasRegular",
"KaushanScript","LeckerliOne","Lemon","LilitaOne","LuckiestGuy","Molle","MrDafoe","MrsSheppards",
"Norican","OriginalSurfer","OswaldBold","OswaldLight","OswaldRegular","Pacifico","Paprika","Playball",
"Quando","Ranchers","SansitaOne","SpicyRice","TitanOne","Yellowtail","Yesteryear"];
for (var i=0; i < fontLibrary.length; i++) {
context.fillText("Sample",250,50);
context.font="34px " + fontLibrary[i];
}
changefontType();
function changefontType() {
selfonttype = $("#selfontype").val();
inputtextgo1();
}
function inputtextgo1() {
var y = 50;
var lineHeight = 36;
area1text = document.getElementById("bag1areatext").value;
context.clearRect(0, 0, 500, 95)
context.drawImage(section1backgroundimage, 0, 0);
context.font="34px " + selfonttype;
context.fillStyle = seltextcolor;
context.fillText(area1text, 250, y);
}
I wrote a jsfiddle incorporating most of the suggested fixes here but none resolved the issue. However, I am a novice programmer so perhaps did not code the suggested fixes correctly:
http://jsfiddle.net/HatHead/GcxQ9/23/
HTML:
<!-- you need to empty your browser cache and do a hard reload EVERYTIME to test this otherwise it will appear to working when, in fact, it isn't -->
<h1>Title Font</h1>
<p>Paragraph font...</p>
<canvas id="myCanvas" width="740" height="400"></canvas>
CSS:
#import url(http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Architects+Daughter);
#import url(http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Rock+Salt);
canvas {
font-family:'Rock Salt', 'Architects Daughter'
}
.wf-loading p {
font-family: serif
}
.wf-inactive p {
font-family: serif
}
.wf-active p {
font-family:'Architects Daughter', serif;
font-size: 24px;
font-weight: bold;
}
.wf-loading h1 {
font-family: serif;
font-weight: 400;
font-size: 42px
}
.wf-inactive h1 {
font-family: serif;
font-weight: 400;
font-size: 42px
}
.wf-active h1 {
font-family:'Rock Salt', serif;
font-weight: 400;
font-size: 42px;
}
JS:
// do the Google Font Loader stuff....
WebFontConfig = {
google: {
families: ['Architects Daughter', 'Rock Salt']
}
};
(function () {
var wf = document.createElement('script');
wf.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https' : 'http') +
'://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/webfont/1/webfont.js';
wf.type = 'text/javascript';
wf.async = 'true';
var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
s.parentNode.insertBefore(wf, s);
})();
//play with the milliseconds delay to find the threshold - don't forget to empty your browser cache and do a hard reload!
setTimeout(WriteCanvasText, 0);
function WriteCanvasText() {
// write some text to the canvas
var canvas = document.getElementById("myCanvas");
var context = canvas.getContext("2d");
context.font = "normal" + " " + "normal" + " " + "bold" + " " + "42px" + " " + "Rock Salt";
context.fillStyle = "#d50";
context.fillText("Canvas Title", 5, 100);
context.font = "normal" + " " + "normal" + " " + "bold" + " " + "24px" + " " + "Architects Daughter";
context.fillText("Here is some text on the canvas...", 5, 180);
}
Workaround
I eventually gave in and, on the first load, used an image of the text while also positioning the text with the font-faces outside of the canvas display area. All subsequent displays of the font-faces within the canvas display area worked no problem. This is not an elegant workaround by any means.
The solution is baked into my website but if anyone needs I will try to create a jsfiddle to demonstrate.
Some browsers support the CSS Font Loading specification. It allows you to register register a callback for when all the fonts have been loaded. You can delay drawing your canvas (or at least drawing text into your canvas) until then, and trigger a redraw once the font is available.
The canvas is drawn independently of the DOM loading. The preload technique will only work if the canvas is drawn after the preload.
My solution, even if it is not the best:
CSS:
.preloadFont {
font-family: 'Audiowide', Impact, Charcoal, sans-serif, cursive;
font-size: 0;
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
HTML:
<body onload="init()">
<div class="preloadFont">.</div>
<canvas id="yourCanvas"></canvas>
</body>
JavaScript:
function init() {
myCanvas.draw();
}
I try to use FontFaceSet.load to fix the problem:
https://jsfiddle.net/wengshenshun/gr1zkvtq/30
const prepareFontLoad = (fontList) => Promise.all(fontList.map(font => document.fonts.load(font)))
You can find the browser compatibility from https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FontFaceSet/load
First of all use Google's Web Font loader as was advised in the other answer and add your drawing code to the callback it provides to indicate the fonts have been loaded. However this is not the end of the story. From this point it is very browser dependent. Most of the time it will work fine, but sometimes it may be required to wait for couple hundreds of milliseconds or use the fonts somewhere else on the page. I tried different options and the one method that afaik always works is to quickly draw some test messages in the canvas with the font family and font size combinations that you are going to use. You can do it with the same color as background, so they won't even be visible and it will happen very fast. After that fonts always worked for me and in all browsers.
My answer addresses Google Web fonts rather than #font-face. I searched everywhere for a solution to the problem of the font not showing up in the canvas. I tried timers, setInterval, font-delay libraries, and all kinds of tricks. Nothing worked. (Including putting font-family in the CSS for canvas or the ID of the canvas element.)
However, I found that animating text rendered in a Google font worked easily. What's the difference? In canvas animation, we re-draw the animated items again and again. So I got the idea to render the text twice.
That did not work either -- until I also added a short (100ms) timer delay. I've only tested on a Mac so far. Chrome worked fine at 100ms. Safari required a page reload, so I increased the timer to 1000, and then it was fine. Firefox 18.0.2 and 20.0 wouldn't load anything on the canvas if I was using Google fonts (including the animation version).
Full code: http://www.macloo.com/examples/canvas/canvas10.html
http://www.macloo.com/examples/canvas/scripts/canvas10.js
Faces same problem. After reading "bobince" and others comments, I uses following javascript to workaround it :
$('body').append("<div id='loadfont' style='font-family: myfont;'>.</div>");
$('#loadfont').remove();
Add a delay as below
<script>
var c = document.getElementById('myCanvas');
var ctx = c.getContext('2d');
setTimeout(function() {
ctx.font = "24px 'Proxy6'"; // uninstalled #fontface font style
ctx.textBaseline = 'top';
ctx.fillText('What!', 20, 10);
}, 100);
</script>