Here are some excerpts from earlier page break questions.  There is an
archive of mail, but I never use it so I have no advise on getting to it.

Also, you can hide the breaks by making them the same as you background
color.  If you never print your diagrams (I mostly use screen dumps) you can
just ignore the scale of your Dia with respect to the page breaks.

M

......................
Jay,

The outline of a "Page" if you show the page breaks is the paper size minus
the margins.  So a lettersize 8.5 x 11 with one inch margins will have page
breaks that are 6.5 x 9 apart.  If you look at the cm rulers and convert to
inches (2.54 cm = 1 in) you will see the correspondence.  Centimeters aside
if you are a US customary unit user, the nice thing about this is you can
work on the array of pages and know just how the printing will break out on
multiple sheets, and you can change the view scale and put an entire diagram
on one sheet without worrying about the margins - just stay within the page
breaks.   You could say that this method of display absolves us of looking a
a bunch non-printing, space wasting, white space between sheets.

Here is a little walk through:  Set your zoom to 100%, and go to the File/
Page Setup.  Set it to Letter size , Landscape, and Scale to 100%.  Set the
top and left margins to 0.0in, set the bottom margin to 0.5in, and the right
to 2.0in.  You will see the the cm rulers correspond to and 8in by 9 inch
working area.  Tweak the Scale to see what that does.  If you leave the
scale at 100% and change the zoom level you will see the rulers track the
size of the page that was setup.  If you make the scale 200% you will see
that this scales the diagram up to double size and the rulers agree with
this.  50% makes the diagram half size.
.....................................

Paul,

I am with you - I haven't got a whole view of the
units/grid/margins/pagesize, etc.  I do have a way of operating that suits
my needs (and where I mostly know what I am doing).  I will try to explain
it an maybe I will understand better and you will benefit.

The base units of Dia are cm.

My default set up is like this:

Page Setup:
Letter size, portrait


Units of inches,
margins set to 1.000 inch all 4 sides
Scale 100%

Grid:
White Background,
pale Grid Lines,
dark Page breaks
Grid Spacing 0.254
Grid Visible Spacing  1
Dynamic Grid    Off

Here is what I see:
Ruler is measuring in cm
The grid is showing inches, but you have to mentally convert the ruler (cm)
to tell this is true.
0.254cm  = 0.1in
The grid lines are spaced just so, where each inch is 2.54 cm (check it on
the ruler)
The the page displays the working area according to my 1 inch margins so
that the page working area is 6.5in x x9in. ((8.5 - 1 - 1) x (11 - 1 - 1)).
 The ruler shows this to be the distance between page breaks shown in cm.
In Preferences/Grid the "lines per major line" is set to 10.
The bolder grid lines make it easy to see where the inches are even though
the ruler is cm.  The page breaks mark out the real extents of a page in
inches.  Look at one of the pages near the ruler origin (0,0) to see ruler
numbers that make sense.

If you change the margins they will correctly shift  - smaller margins get
you a larger working area in inches; larger margins means smaller working
area.

I use this setup as my default, and sometimes have to go back to it for
reassurance.  Everything makes sense this way so when I change things I can
refer back to this as a frame of reference.

Good luck,

M

On Wed, Dec 29, 2010 at 7:08 AM, Chris G <c...@isbd.net> wrote:

> I'm confused (no change there then!) about what the 'Page Break'
> markings do for me.
>
> It took me a while to realise that the solid blue lines *were* the Page
> Breaks and that I could remove them using the Preferences settings.
> That's good as I find them distracting because they sit very close
> to some of the major grid lines on my system.
>
> However I also don't understand what they're for, they don't appear to
> indicate actual paper size blocks on the diagram, on my system they seem
> to be just over 15cm wide (hence the blue line is very close to the 15cm
> grid line) and 24cm high.  The default paper size on my system is A4 so
> those dimensions are nothing like the paper size.
>
>
> Playing a bit further I'm now also confused by the Dynamic grid setting
> and the general usage of the rulers and grid lines.  When I set a
> diagram to Dynamic grid and zoom in and out the grid lines change
> sometimes but not other times, does it just do its best to keep the grid
> lines at about the same size?
>
>
> Final question - is it possible to reset the top left corner of a
> diagram to 0:0 on the rulers?
>
> --
> Chris Green
> _______________________________________________
> dia-list mailing list
> dia-list@gnome.org
> http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/dia-list
> FAQ at http://live.gnome.org/Dia/Faq
> Main page at http://live.gnome.org/Dia
>
>


-- 
                    Michael E. Ross
      NC Solar Center Test Laboratory
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         michael.e.r...@gmail.com
   =============================


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