Hello!

I apologize in advance if this is not the place to ask this question, but
freetype doesn't seem to have a forum anywhere, so...

I have recently come across a great article about font rendering,
http://www.antigrain.com/research/font_rasterization/

It basically states (and very convincingly illustrates) that the secret to
very good font rendering is to use only vertical pixel alignment, which I
take means to apply hinting only vertically. Horizontally, the article
suggests to use subpixel rendering -- that would mean very good scalability
and shapes. I have tried many configurations in an attempt to produce the
same result (
http://www.antigrain.com/research/font_rasterization/text_ft_antigrain.pngis
a handcrafted example of what that would achieve), but horizontal
pixel
alignment seems to kick in even when disabling hinting completely. This is
evidenced by characters having the same width with diffrent sizes. For
example, if you scale the line lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll, its length
will increase unevenly: at first it would change very little and then
suddenly make a great leap. Either that, or that line would seem to have
unevenly distributed spaces between the characters.

I'm wondering if I just can't figure out how to configure it all correctly,
or if the pixel alignment is built in without the ability to turn it off
somehow. Or if maybe it's the creators of web browsers, office suites or
desktops environments don't know how to achieve such an effect.

So, let me reiterate my main inquiry: is it possible (with freetype) to use
vertical hinting and pixel alignment only, leaving subpixel rendering to
take care of the horizontal aspect?

Regards,
Victor
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