47

How to make the font size bigger in g.drawString("Hello World",10,10); ?

4
  • 5
    Did you try setFont()?
    – trashgod
    Aug 15, 2013 at 9:19
  • 7
    Start by taking at java.awt.Font. The method Font#deriveFont is very useful Aug 15, 2013 at 9:23
  • The answer below is mostly right. Start with the question slightly reworded. How do I change the font size of a g or g2d drawstring object?
    – Max West
    Jun 20, 2014 at 15:15
  • 1
    The answer below is mostly right. Start with the question slightly reworded. How do I change the font size of a g or g2d drawstring object? First create your g (or g2d) drawstring object String string = "Hello World"; then create a Font object Font stringFont = new Font( "SansSerif", Font.PLAIN, 18 ); Next set the Font object to the g or g2d object g2d.setFont( stringFont ); Now apply the g2d (or g) object to your drawstring object g2d.drawString( string, Xposition, Yposition ) where X and Y are your integers for the positioning coordinates.
    – Max West
    Jun 20, 2014 at 15:26

5 Answers 5

79
g.setFont(new Font("TimesRoman", Font.PLAIN, fontSize)); 

Where fontSize is a int. The API for drawString states that the x and y parameters are coordinates, and have nothing to do with the size of the text.

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  • 8
    This works, but if you only want to set the font size and not the font name, you can use g.getFont().getFontName() in place of the font name parameter Oct 7, 2014 at 15:53
  • 11
    @shieldgenerator7 I think if you only want to change the size, then MadProgrammer's suggestion is better: use deriveFont(float size). Oct 30, 2014 at 10:39
  • @YohanesKhosiawan许先汉 You're right that is much easier, however at the time I didn't see his comment because it was unreadable. Thanks for pointing that out. Nov 6, 2014 at 13:05
  • 2
    For those seeking the the default font, g.getFont().getFontName() is your best bet, but on all the systems I have tested on, it's Dialog.
    – Scruffy
    Feb 21, 2015 at 10:28
25

Because you can't count on a particular font being available, a good approach is to derive a new font from the current font. This gives you the same family, weight, etc. just larger...

Font currentFont = g.getFont();
Font newFont = currentFont.deriveFont(currentFont.getSize() * 1.4F);
g.setFont(newFont);

You can also use TextAttribute.

Map<TextAttribute, Object> attributes = new HashMap<>();

attributes.put(TextAttribute.FAMILY, currentFont.getFamily());
attributes.put(TextAttribute.WEIGHT, TextAttribute.WEIGHT_SEMIBOLD);
attributes.put(TextAttribute.SIZE, (int) (currentFont.getSize() * 1.4));
myFont = Font.getFont(attributes);

g.setFont(myFont);

The TextAttribute method often gives one even greater flexibility. For example, you can set the weight to semi-bold, as in the example above.

One last suggestion... Because the resolution of monitors can be different and continues to increase with technology, avoid adding a specific amount (such as getSize()+2 or getSize()+4) and consider multiplying instead. This way, your new font is consistently proportional to the "current" font (getSize() * 1.4), and you won't be editing your code when you get one of those nice 4K monitors.

7
Font myFont = new Font ("Courier New", 1, 17);

The 17 represents the font size. Once you have that, you can put:

g.setFont (myFont);
g.drawString ("Hello World", 10, 10);
5

code example below:

g.setFont(new Font("TimesRoman", Font.PLAIN, 30));
g.drawString("Welcome to the Java Applet", 20 , 20);
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  • 1
    can you clean up the formatting and use a code block please.
    – James
    Oct 21, 2016 at 1:33
3

I've an image located at here, Using below code. I am able to contgrol any things on the text that i wanted to write (Eg,signature,Transparent Water mark, Text with differnt Font and size).

 import java.awt.Font;
    import java.awt.Graphics2D;
    import java.awt.Point;
    import java.awt.font.TextAttribute;
    import java.awt.image.BufferedImage;
    import java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream;
    import java.io.FileOutputStream;
    import java.io.IOException;
    import java.net.URL;
    import java.util.HashMap;
    import java.util.Map;

    import javax.imageio.ImageIO;

    public class ImagingTest {

        public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
            String url = "http://images.all-free-download.com/images/graphiclarge/bay_beach_coast_coastline_landscape_nature_nobody_601234.jpg";
            String text = "I am appending This text!";
            byte[] b = mergeImageAndText(url, text, new Point(100, 100));
            FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream("so2.png");
            fos.write(b);
            fos.close();
        }

        public static byte[] mergeImageAndText(String imageFilePath,
                String text, Point textPosition) throws IOException {
            BufferedImage im = ImageIO.read(new URL(imageFilePath));
            Graphics2D g2 = im.createGraphics();
            Font currentFont = g2.getFont();
            Font newFont = currentFont.deriveFont(currentFont.getSize() * 1.4F);
            g2.setFont(newFont);


            Map<TextAttribute, Object> attributes = new HashMap<>();

            attributes.put(TextAttribute.FAMILY, currentFont.getFamily());
            attributes.put(TextAttribute.WEIGHT, TextAttribute.WEIGHT_SEMIBOLD);
            attributes.put(TextAttribute.SIZE, (int) (currentFont.getSize() * 2.8));
            newFont = Font.getFont(attributes);

            g2.setFont(newFont);
            g2.drawString(text, textPosition.x, textPosition.y);
            ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
            ImageIO.write(im, "png", baos);
            return baos.toByteArray();
        }
    }

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