@next/font
Version:
`@next/font` includes built-in automatic self-hosting for any font file. This means you can optimally load web fonts with zero layout shift, thanks to the underlying CSS size-adjust property used.
87 lines (86 loc) • 4 kB
JavaScript
Object.defineProperty(exports, "__esModule", { value: true });
exports.pickFontFileForFallbackGeneration = void 0;
const next_font_error_1 = require("../next-font-error");
const NORMAL_WEIGHT = 400;
const BOLD_WEIGHT = 700;
/**
* Convert the weight string to a number so it can be used for comparison.
* Weights can be defined as a number, 'normal' or 'bold'. https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/CSS/@font-face/font-weight
*/
function getWeightNumber(weight) {
return weight === 'normal'
? NORMAL_WEIGHT
: weight === 'bold'
? BOLD_WEIGHT
: Number(weight);
}
/**
* Get the distance from normal (400) weight for the provided weight.
* If it's not a variable font we can just return the distance.
* If it's a variable font we need to compare its weight range to 400.
*/
function getDistanceFromNormalWeight(weight) {
if (!weight)
return 0;
// If it's a variable font the weight is defined with two numbers "100 900", rather than just one "400"
const [firstWeight, secondWeight] = weight
.trim()
.split(/ +/)
.map(getWeightNumber);
if (Number.isNaN(firstWeight) || Number.isNaN(secondWeight)) {
(0, next_font_error_1.nextFontError)(`Invalid weight value in src array: \`${weight}\`.\nExpected \`normal\`, \`bold\` or a number.`);
}
// If the weight doesn't have have a second value, it's not a variable font
// If that's the case, just return the distance from normal weight
if (!secondWeight) {
return firstWeight - NORMAL_WEIGHT;
}
// Normal weight is within variable font range
if (firstWeight <= NORMAL_WEIGHT && secondWeight >= NORMAL_WEIGHT) {
return 0;
}
// Normal weight is outside variable font range
// Return the distance of normal weight to the variable font range
const firstWeightDistance = firstWeight - NORMAL_WEIGHT;
const secondWeightDistance = secondWeight - NORMAL_WEIGHT;
if (Math.abs(firstWeightDistance) < Math.abs(secondWeightDistance)) {
return firstWeightDistance;
}
return secondWeightDistance;
}
/**
* If multiple font files are provided for a font family, we need to pick one to use for the automatic fallback generation.
* This function returns the font file that is most likely to be used for the bulk of the text on a page.
*
* There are some assumptions here about the text on a page when picking the font file:
* - Most of the text will have normal weight, use the one closest to 400
* - Most of the text will have normal style, prefer normal over italic
* - If two font files have the same distance from normal weight, the thinner one will most likely be the bulk of the text
*/
function pickFontFileForFallbackGeneration(fontFiles) {
return fontFiles.reduce((usedFontFile, currentFontFile) => {
if (!usedFontFile)
return currentFontFile;
const usedFontDistance = getDistanceFromNormalWeight(usedFontFile.weight);
const currentFontDistance = getDistanceFromNormalWeight(currentFontFile.weight);
// Prefer normal style if they have the same weight
if (usedFontDistance === currentFontDistance &&
(typeof currentFontFile.style === 'undefined' ||
currentFontFile.style === 'normal')) {
return currentFontFile;
}
const absUsedDistance = Math.abs(usedFontDistance);
const absCurrentDistance = Math.abs(currentFontDistance);
// Use closest absolute distance to normal weight
if (absCurrentDistance < absUsedDistance)
return currentFontFile;
// Prefer the thinner font if both have the same absolute distance from normal weight
if (absUsedDistance === absCurrentDistance &&
currentFontDistance < usedFontDistance) {
return currentFontFile;
}
return usedFontFile;
});
}
exports.pickFontFileForFallbackGeneration = pickFontFileForFallbackGeneration;
;