Den lördagen den 21:e december 2013 kl. 20:56:54 UTC+1 skrev Ned Batchelder: > On 12/21/13 2:12 PM, jonas.thornv...@gmail.com wrote: > > > Den l�rdagen den 21:e december 2013 kl. 20:03:17 UTC+1 skrev Ned > > Batchelder: > > >> On 12/21/13 1:30 PM, jonas.thornv...@gmail.com wrote: > > >> > > >>> Is there a way to make linebased graphic used in canvas scale correct on > >>> any monitor? > > >> > > >>> > > >> > > >>> I run in 1920*1080 on a Philips TV used as monitor does it matter, lines > >>> tend to get longer vertical then horizontal? > > >> > > >>> > > >> > > >>> Strange is i really do not see it writing out recangles. > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> I'm not sure how we can help without seeing any code. There's no > > >> > > >> information here that we can use to make a concrete suggestion. > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> -- > > >> > > >> Ned Batchelder, http://nedbatchelder.com > > > A vertical and horisontal line of same length will be plottet out like this. > > > There is really no code to show yet, i just write out some lines and noted > > that writing out a verital line of length 400 is longer then a horisontal > > line of same length e.g. > > > > > > line(100,100,500,100); is shorter > > > line(300,100,300,500); is longer > > > > > > __________ > > > | > > > | > > > | > > > | > > > | > > > | > > > > > > > Sounds like you don't have square pixels. Either use a monitor which > > does, or adjust your coordinates to take the shape of the pixel into > > account, or try different resolution settings to see if one of them does > > have square pixels. Also, the settings on the monitor matter also, you > > may be able to adjust them to correct the shape of the pixel. > > > > -- > > Ned Batchelder, http://nedbatchelder.com
It is weird because it seem to be compensated writing out rectangles, but not for linegraphics. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list