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I would like to find out information about the layout of text in a PdfPCell. I'm aware of BaseFont.getWidthPointKerned(), but I'm looking for more detailed information like:

  1. How many lines would a string need if rendered in a cell of a given width (say, 30pt)? What would the height in points of the PdfPCell be?

  2. Give me the prefix or suffix of a string that fits in a cell of a given width and height. That is, if I have to render the text "Today is a good day to die" in a specific font in a PdfPCell of width 12pt and height 20pt, what portion of the string would fit in the available space?

  3. Where does iText break a given string when asked to render it in a cell of a given width?

This is with regard to iText 2.1.6. Thanks.

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  • Is there a policy that limits the rate at which one can ask questions? I have been using iText for many months now, BTW. It's just that I decided to ask my questions at once rather than dribbling them out. I looked through the other methods in BaseFont to see if there are methods that give me this information, but there weren't any. Feb 28, 2014 at 14:42
  • For other questions, I've showed what I tried (for example: stackoverflow.com/questions/22093993/… ). That one describes the problem, how I partially solved it so far, and makes a proposal as to what I can do next. In this case, I could not think of what else to try, because there's no suitable API method I can see to try. I'm not asking to be taught or to "please do my homework". Regarding your request for code, I can give you the code for splitting columns, but that's going to confuse more than help. Feb 28, 2014 at 14:55
  • Splitting columnns doesn't apply to this question but to stackoverflow.com/questions/22093993/… . Does your comment apply to this question or to the linked one? Thanks. Feb 28, 2014 at 15:02
  • Thanks for the tip about PdfTemplate. I will try it out. Regarding your other point, I have tried my best to ask specific, detailed questions. Not "how do I set the row height?" (which would be a homework / newbie question) but "how do setMinimumHeight() and setFixedHeight() interact?" I have used iText, read the API docs, tried things out, etc. But you were in a hurry to blame me for not reading the book without realizing that the book does NOT answer the question asked. If you don't want to help me, that's up to you :) Feb 28, 2014 at 15:17
  • Oh, and thanks for building iText, which I've benefitted from :) And, just as a general note, if you find a specific question confusing, please let me know what aspect of it is confusing, and I can post code to illustrate that aspect. Simply posting code to cover everything would go to pages and confuse rather than clarify. Feb 28, 2014 at 15:19

1 Answer 1

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iText uses the ColumnText class to render content to a cell. This is explained in my book on page 98-99. This means that, just like with ColumnText, you need to make the distinction between text mode and composite mode.

In any case, ColumnText measures the width of the characters and tests if they fit the available width. If not, the text is split. You can change the split behavior in different ways: by introducing hyphenation or by defining a custom split character.

I've written a small proof of concept to show how you could implement custom "truncation" behavior. See the TruncateTextInCell example.

Instead of adding the content to the cell, I have an empty cell for which I define a cell event. I pass the long text "D2 is a cell with more content than we can fit into the cell." to this event.

In the event, I use a fancy algorithm: I want the text to be truncated in the middle and insert "..." at the place where I truncated the text.

BaseFont bf = BaseFont.createFont();
Font font = new Font(bf, 12);
float availableWidth = position.getWidth();
int contentLength = content.length();
int leftChar = 0;
int rightChar = contentLength - 1;
availableWidth -= bf.getWidthPoint("...", 12);
while (leftChar < contentLength && rightChar != leftChar) {
    availableWidth -= bf.getWidthPoint(content.charAt(leftChar), 12);
    if (availableWidth > 0)
        leftChar++;
    else
        break;
    availableWidth -= bf.getWidthPoint(content.charAt(rightChar), 12);
    if (availableWidth > 0)
        rightChar--;
    else
        break;
    }
    String newContent = content.substring(0, leftChar) + "..." + content.substring(rightChar);
    PdfContentByte canvas = canvases[PdfPTable.TEXTCANVAS];
    ColumnText ct = new ColumnText(canvas);
    ct.setSimpleColumn(position);
    ct.addElement(new Paragraph(newContent, font));
    ct.go();

As you can see, we get the available width from the position parameter and we check how many characters match, alternating between a character at the start and a character at the end of the content.

The result is shown in the resulting PDF: the content is truncated like this: "D2 is a c... the cell."

Your question about "how many lines" can be solved in a similar way. The ColumnText class has a getLinesWritten() method that gives you that information. You can find more info about positioning a ColumnText object in my answer to your other question: Can I tell iText how to clip text to fit in a cell

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  • Thanks, Bruno. I will read through your three answers soon and get back to you. Mar 1, 2014 at 15:35
  • Part of this answer has been duplicated here.
    – Kermit
    Mar 1, 2014 at 15:58
  • @KartickVaddadi Answering questions is a thing of honor for me. It proves over and over again that the people at iText really know their stuff. Unfortunately, some people at your company have made me false promises in the past. Not keeping promises is not something I consider honorable, so I hope your company will finally do the right thing after all the years they've been stalling. Mar 1, 2014 at 19:08
  • I am not aware of what other people at my company have or have not promised, and in what context, and so forth, so I am not interested in rehashing those. Let's stay focused on the technical discussion, okay? Mar 2, 2014 at 2:32
  • No, that's not okay. You, as a developer have the responsibility to do the right thing. You should have waited until the support contract was in place. I've been waiting for 5 years for your company to become a customer, surely you should be able to wait until a contract is signed. I am waiting for your company to make that step, it's not the other way round! Mar 2, 2014 at 8:03

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