WhiteFang34's code is useful in combination with the following method that returns the actual height of a specific string. It might be a bit slow for real-time rendering, especially for large fonts/strings and I'm sure it can be further optimised, but for now it meets my own needs and is fast enough to run in a back-end process.
/*
* getFontRenderedHeight
* *************************************************************************
* Summary: Font metrics do not give an accurate measurement of the rendered
* font height for certain strings because the space between the ascender
* limit and baseline is not always fully used and descenders may not be
* present. for example the strings '0' 'a' 'f' and 'j' are all different
* heights from top to bottom but the metrics returned are always the same.
* If you want to place text that exactly fills a specific height, you need
* to work out what the exact height is for the specific string. This method
* achieves that by rendering the text and then scanning the top and bottom
* rows until the real height of the string is found.
*/
/**
* Calculate the actual height of rendered text for a specific string more
* accurately than metrics when ascenders and descenders may not be present
* <p>
* Note: this method is probably not very efficient for repeated measurement
* of large strings and large font sizes but it works quite effectively for
* short strings. Consider measuring a subset of your string value. Also
* beware of measuring symbols such as '-' and '.' the results may be
* unexpected!
*
* @param string
* The text to measure. You might be able to speed this process
* up by only measuring a single character or subset of your
* string i.e if you know your string ONLY contains numbers and
* all the numbers in the font are the same height, just pass in
* a single digit rather than the whole numeric string.
* @param font
* The font being used. Obviously the size of the font affects
* the result
* @param targetGraphicsContext
* The graphics context the text will actually be rendered in.
* This is passed in so the rendering options for anti-aliasing
* can be matched.
* @return Integer - the exact actual height of the text.
* @author Robert Heritage [[email protected]]
*/
public Integer getFontRenderedHeight(String string, Font font, Graphics2D targetGraphicsContext) {
BufferedImage image;
Graphics2D g;
Color textColour = Color.white;
// In the first instance; use a temporary BufferedImage object to render
// the text and get the font metrics.
image = new BufferedImage(1, 1, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB);
g = image.createGraphics();
FontMetrics metrics = g.getFontMetrics(font);
Rectangle2D rect = metrics.getStringBounds(string, g);
// now set up the buffered Image with a canvas size slightly larger than
// the font metrics - this guarantees that there is at least one row of
// black pixels at the top and the bottom
image = new BufferedImage((int) rect.getWidth() + 1, (int) metrics.getHeight() + 2, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_RGB);
g = image.createGraphics();
// take the rendering hints from the target graphics context to ensure
// the results are accurate.
g.setRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_ANTIALIASING, targetGraphicsContext.getRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_ANTIALIASING));
g.setRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_TEXT_ANTIALIASING, targetGraphicsContext.getRenderingHint(RenderingHints.KEY_TEXT_ANTIALIASING));
g.setColor(textColour);
g.setFont(font);
g.drawString(string, 0, image.getHeight());
// scan the bottom row - descenders will be cropped initially, so the
// text will need to be moved up (down in the co-ordinates system) to
// fit it in the canvas if it contains any. This may need to be done a
// few times until there is a row of black pixels at the bottom.
boolean foundBottom, foundTop = false;
int offset = 0;
do {
g.setColor(Color.BLACK);
g.fillRect(0, 0, image.getWidth(), image.getHeight());
g.setColor(textColour);
g.drawString(string, 0, image.getHeight() - offset);
foundBottom = true;
for (int x = 0; x < image.getWidth(); x++) {
if (image.getRGB(x, image.getHeight() - 1) != Color.BLACK.getRGB()) {
foundBottom = false;
}
}
offset++;
} while (!foundBottom);
System.out.println(image.getHeight());
// Scan the top of the image downwards one line at a time until it
// contains a non-black pixel. This loop uses the break statement to
// stop the while loop as soon as a non-black pixel is found, this
// avoids the need to scan the rest of the line
int y = 0;
do {
for (int x = 0; x < image.getWidth(); x++) {
if (image.getRGB(x, y) != Color.BLACK.getRGB()) {
foundTop = true;
break;
}
}
y++;
} while (!foundTop);
return image.getHeight() - y;
}