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WPF Text Measurement Units

The WPF text team has seen some people get confused about what units WPF uses when measuring text. Samer, a developer on the WPF text team, and I have created this post to try and shed some light on this subject. The first part of this post is very straight forward, whereas the end will only be useful for those of you who are extensively using WPF text APIs.

General Units

WPF supports multiple units for text measurement. The units that can be used are “px” (device independent pixels), “in" (inches), "cm" (centimeters), "pt" (points). If you do not specify the unit of measurement, WPF defaults to px.

<TextBlock FontSize="24">Hello World</TextBlock>

24px

To force WPF to use a different unit of measurement, just append the unit abbreviation to the FontSize.

 

<TextBlock FontSize="24pt">Hello World</TextBlock>

24pt

 

Device Independent Pixels & Physical Pixels

In accordance with WPF’s resolution independence, the framework measures objects in device independent pixels. These device independent pixels can have different sizes than physical pixels.

 

1 device independent pixel = 1/96 inch.

1 physical pixel = 1/DPI (dependent on the system DPI)

Default system settings usually choose a DPI of 96 so these two types of pixels come out to be the same size. If this is not the case, it is easy to convert between the two types of pixels.

 

physical pixels = DPI/96 * device independent pixels

device independent pixels = 96/DPI * physical pixels

 

Notice that as the DPI increases, so does the number of physical pixels which compose one device independent pixel. Hence, objects that have their sizes specified in device independent pixels get larger as the system DPI increases.

 

 

Points

A point (pt) is also a common unit of measurement for fonts.

 

1pt = 1/72 inches

 

Converting between points and device independent pixels is also easy.

 

pt = 72/96 device independent pixels

device independent pixels = 96/72 pt

 

Remember objects which are measured in device independent pixels get larger as system DPI increases? This is true for text. Since there is a constant ratio between point sizes/device independent pixels, if the point size of text is held constant while the system DPI is increased, the size of the rendered text will grow.

Uses For Font Units

Aside from knowing how to correctly set FontSize, the above knowledge could be helpful in understanding the values that WPF text APIs, such as FormattedText or TextFormatter, use and return for the different text measurements. The metrics returned from these APIs are in device independent pixel (eg. some properties of GlyphTypeface including Baseline, CapsHeight, XHeight). When interacting with these APIs make sure that you convert to device independent pixels from whatever unit your font is measured in, or visa versa.

 

- Samer and Chipalo

Comments

  • Anonymous
    February 16, 2010
    Thanks..now I totally understand the difference between px and pt.

  • Anonymous
    February 17, 2010
    It looks there are some errors: must be: physical pixels = (96/DPI) * device independent pixels pt = (96/72) * device independent pixels

  • Anonymous
    March 01, 2010
    Greg – Those calculations are actually correct. When converting from physical pixels (pp) to device independent pixels (dip), remember that as the resolution increases, the number of pp per inch increases, but the number of dip per inch remains constant. In regards to dip vs pt... 1/96 * dip = 1/72 * pt (72) * (1/96 * dip) = (72) * (1/72 * pt) 72/96 dip = pt