Le 29/09/2010 08:12, Michael Ross a écrit :
Set the page setup to "Scale" and you can place things wherever you
like relative to the printed area borders.
The printed area borders are called in Dia "page breaks." As you
change the page format (letter, A4, legal etc.), and the margins the
pri
Set the page setup to "Scale" and you can place things wherever you like
relative to the printed area borders.
The printed area borders are called in Dia "page breaks." As you change the
page format (letter, A4, legal etc.), and the margins the printed area
borders change accordingly.
You can hi
I found it:
In your page setup you have Fit to Page activated. (I have never used this.)
Select instead Scale.
On Wed, Sep 29, 2010 at 1:56 AM, Michael Ross wrote:
> Well now, that is new to me, but the screen capture may help someone else
> see the problem.
>
> I can relocate anything in my Di
On Tue, 28 Sep 2010 22:38:42 -0700, Zorgh wrote:
Le 28/09/2010 00:48, Michael Ross a écrit :
Are you saying that this is NOT a printing problem? It is a problem
of viewing the Dia while working on it?
for example : http://vimeo.com/15367203
Zorgh, The blue lines you are seeing are prin
Well now, that is new to me, but the screen capture may help someone else
see the problem.
I can relocate anything in my Dia without having that happen. There must be
some setting that causes it. You should experiment.
I will look around as well.
On Wed, Sep 29, 2010 at 1:38 AM, Zorgh wrote:
Le 28/09/2010 00:48, Michael Ross a écrit :
Are you saying that this is NOT a printing problem? It is a problem
of viewing the Dia while working on it?
Do you mean that when you move the Dia that it moves back to the left
and you have done nothing at all? (that would make no sens at all)
O
Are you saying that this is NOT a printing problem? It is a problem of
viewing the Dia while working on it?
Do you mean that when you move the Dia that it moves back to the left and
you have done nothing at all? (that would make no sens at all)
Or do you meant that in response to some activity
Le 27/09/2010 16:23, Octavio Alvarez a écrit :
On Mon, 27 Sep 2010 05:08:00 -0700, Michael Ross
wrote:
It is possible to interpret the question in multiple ways...
Yes, but I think he means on the printer, not on the screen.
For the screen I would suggest Ctrl+E.
This is the expected res
For printing I always make a screen dump and print that. There may be a
better way, but I am aways in too much hurry to sort it out.
On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 10:23 AM, Octavio Alvarez wrote:
> On Mon, 27 Sep 2010 05:08:00 -0700, Michael Ross
> wrote:
>
> It is possible to interpret the questio
On Mon, 27 Sep 2010 05:08:00 -0700, Michael Ross
wrote:
It is possible to interpret the question in multiple ways...
Yes, but I think he means on the printer, not on the screen.
For the screen I would suggest Ctrl+E.
--
Octavio.
Twitter: @alvarezp2000 -- Identi.ca: @alvarezp
It is possible to interpret the question in multiple ways...
If no shapes or primitives are selected, you can zoom to the extents of the
Diagram using Zoom - Best Fit. (Screen Icon is a magnifying glass with a
dashed box inside.) This centers the entire diagram.
Best Fit also centers any selecti
On Sun, 26 Sep 2010 12:11:27 -0700, Zorgh wrote:
How can I centre the entire diagram ?
http://imgur.com/93XPP.jpg
In the Page Setup dialog, I selected Fit 1 by 1 and changed paper size's
value from A4 to A3.
I know this isn't the answer you are looking for, but, AFAIK, Dia can't
do that.
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