Hi,
Brand new, so forgive me if I'm asking something silly. I saw a discussion
about this in the archives, but there didn't seem to be any resolution.
OK, I have opened a new diagram. I'm a Merkan, so I have set the page size to
"Letter" and I'm using landscape mode. The paper size says 21.6
More info:
I played around with the Page Setup dialog. First, I set all margins to 0.0mm
and clicked "Apply", which correctly displayed the page breaks at 216mm and
279mm. Then I increased the margins. Interestingly, the top and bottom
limited themselves to 10.30mm and the left and right lim
OK, while I'm at it, why are the margins limited to the numbers 10.3 and 13.47
for the Letter size? The length unit itself is a factor in how wide the
margins are. For example, when I use millimeters, the maximum margins are
10.3mm and 13.47mm. If I want something greater than 10.3mm or 13.47
> The page breaks lie where the margins lie (with scale set to 100%). This way
> you don't have to look at white space if your Dia get bigger than a page.
Yes, I understand. That is very nice. I'm not sure I understand what the
scale has to do with it though. Is there more to it than just th
> There is zoom factor and there is scale. Zoom factor brings you closer to
> your work without affecting how the rulers look relative to the page breaks
> and grid (and your Dia). Scaling (on the Page Setup dialog with the
> margins). Changes the page behind the graphics and the ruler.
OK, c
Chris Green wrote:
> Exactly the question I asked a while ago and no one believed the numbers
> simply don't add up correctly.
I'm definitely with Chris on this. To see exactly what Chris and I are seeing,
please follow these steps:
1) Go to File > Preferences > User Interface on the main wind
Michael Ross wrote:
> To Doug, I haven't checked recently, but believe the rulers always show cm
> regardless the "input settings" you choose.
Yes, I believe you are correct, sir!
> To Chris, I think your arithmetic and/or understanding are not correct. I
> sympathize completely - this is not