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Bypass Graphics.MeasureString limitations

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4.73/5 (45 votes)
22 Apr 2003LGPL31 min read 424.1K   89   69
This sample code computes the width of the string, as drawn by Graphics.DrawString

Sample Image - measurestring.gif

Introduction

Graphics.MeasureString can be used to compute the height and width of a text string. Often, however, the dimensions returned do not match the size of what gets drawn on screen when calling Graphics.DrawString. The red box above shows the dimensions returned by Graphics.MeasureString, which is about an em too wide...

The differences between what is computed and what is really drawn on the screen are related to how GDI+ computes its widths when using hinting and antialiasing. Here are the  gory details. A known work-around is to make GDI+ display its string antialiased, in which case the measured width matches the displayed result. If you want to draw standard strings (to match the GUI appearance, for instance), you are left out.

First, naive solution

The code I present here can be inserted into any class which needs to compute the real width of a string (shown by the yellow background above). The trick I use to compute the real string width is to ask GDI+ to draw the string into a bitmap and then find the position of the last character by reading back the pixels. A few optimisations ensure that this gets done as fast as possible (small bitmap, few pixels).

C#
static public int MeasureDisplayStringWidth(Graphics graphics, string text,
                                            Font font)
{
    const int width = 32;

    System.Drawing.Bitmap   bitmap = new System.Drawing.Bitmap (width, 1, <BR>                                                                graphics);
    System.Drawing.SizeF    size   = graphics.MeasureString (text, font);
    System.Drawing.Graphics anagra = System.Drawing.Graphics.FromImage(bitmap);

    int measured_width = (int) size.Width;

    if (anagra != null)
    {
        anagra.Clear (Color.White);
        anagra.DrawString (text+"|", font, Brushes.Black,
                           width - measured_width, -font.Height / 2);

        for (int i = width-1; i >= 0; i--)
        {
            measured_width--;
            if (bitmap.GetPixel (i, 0).R != 255)    // found a non-white pixel ?
                break;
        }
    }

    return measured_width;
}

That's all, folks. Right-to-left scripts won't probably work with this piece of code.

Another solution...

It is also possible to get the accurate string geometry by using MeasureCharacterRanges, which returns a region matching exactly the bounding box of the specified string. This is faster and more elegant than the first solution I posted on CodeProject.

C#
static public int MeasureDisplayStringWidth(Graphics graphics, string text,
                                            Font font)
{
    System.Drawing.StringFormat format  = new System.Drawing.StringFormat ();
    System.Drawing.RectangleF   rect    = new System.Drawing.RectangleF(0, 0,
                                                                  1000, 1000);
    System.Drawing.CharacterRange[] ranges  = <BR>                                       { new System.Drawing.CharacterRange(0, 
                                                               text.Length) };
    System.Drawing.Region[]         regions = new System.Drawing.Region[1];

    format.SetMeasurableCharacterRanges (ranges);

    regions = graphics.MeasureCharacterRanges (text, font, rect, format);
    rect    = regions[0].GetBounds (graphics);

    return (int)(rect.Right + 1.0f);
}

Post Script

Both functions only work with non-empty strings. The second solution will strip the trailing spaces; the first solution will take them in account. Choose the one which best fits your needs

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPLv3)


Written By
Web Developer
Switzerland Switzerland

Pierre Arnaud got a Ph.D. in computer science at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology; he currently works both as an independent contractor on hardware and software projects at OPaC bright ideas and as a senior software designer at EPSITEC.


Pierre was a key contributor to the Smaky computer, a real time, multitasking system based on the Motorola 680x0 processor family.


Now, Pierre works on his spare time for the Creative Docs .NET project: it is a vector based drawing and page layout software based on .NET and AGG.


Comments and Discussions

 
GeneralRe: Poor Pin
Gensi22-Aug-03 6:33
sussGensi22-Aug-03 6:33 
GeneralIts not Poor, its helpful Pin
x-b5-May-05 3:30
x-b5-May-05 3:30 
GeneralGREAT Pin
jlau13-Mar-03 22:05
jlau13-Mar-03 22:05 
GeneralRe: GREAT Pin
kennethkryger21-Jun-04 3:32
kennethkryger21-Jun-04 3:32 
Generalnon integer font size Pin
compumaster12-Mar-03 11:42
compumaster12-Mar-03 11:42 
GeneralRe: non integer font size Pin
Pierre Arnaud13-Apr-03 20:47
Pierre Arnaud13-Apr-03 20:47 
GeneralA better way to measure strings. Pin
20-Jun-02 5:24
suss20-Jun-02 5:24 
GeneralRe: A better way to measure strings. Pin
dog_spawn23-Apr-03 10:25
dog_spawn23-Apr-03 10:25 
That's correct. I used StringFormat.GenericTypographic in a project and it gave the correct measurements.
GeneralRe: A better way to measure strings. Pin
netmar7-Jul-04 22:19
netmar7-Jul-04 22:19 
Generalquestion Pin
15-Apr-02 2:30
suss15-Apr-02 2:30 
GeneralRe: question Pin
15-Apr-02 22:36
suss15-Apr-02 22:36 
GeneralYet Another Solution Pin
Alastair Stell29-Jul-02 23:25
Alastair Stell29-Jul-02 23:25 

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