Re: Problem with not printing to scale
- From: "Michael Ross" <michael e ross gmail com>
- To: "discussions about usage and development of dia" <dia-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Problem with not printing to scale
- Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2008 11:48:37 -0500
Don't forget to double check the printer driver settings. Scale to fit will make it long if the image is smaller than the selected paper size. Landscape letter size in the diagram printed to landscape A4 with scale to fit might mess it up this way. You want to force it to print 100%
2008/2/12 John King III <
waldo120 gmail com>:
Thanks. When you say scalling operators, do you mean in print setup or someplace else? I made sure it was set to 100% scale.
This got me thinking and so I just tried setting the margins to 0 and it's still long.
On Feb 12, 2008 9:32 AM, Lars Clausen <
lars raeder dk> wrote:
On Fri, 2008-02-08 at 15:03 -0800, John King III wrote:
> Hi, i'm trying to print the attached dia file to scale. I set the
> graph so that x and y are 0.254 cm which equals 0.1 inch. So if I
> print this then the line going across 10 units (may have to adjust
> your grid spacing to see this since I don't think it saves the grid
> spacing) it should be 1 inch long, right? It's actually measuring
> about 1 1/16" or 2.75 cm (should be 2.54). It's a little better if I
> print to another printer, but still off. It's even better but still
> off if I print to PDFCreator then to my printer making sure to not
> scale to margins. Is this a margin issue? How can I print to scale?
I tried printing your diagram directly (on a Linux box) with the default
setting (A4 paper). The line labelled "1 inch" came out to exactly one
inch. As long as you don't use the scaling operators, my experience has
been that it's very accurate. No experience on Windows, though.
> Thanks in advance for any help.
>
> Also, I couldn't really find anywhere to post suggestions, so I will
> here.
> 1. Add length/dimension control. Just make it so you can manually
> type the distance a line or rectangle is into its properties.
It's easy enough to make the dimensions visible as properties, but
there's not yet the needed infrastructure to make them update properly
when the object moves/resizes in the diagram.
> 1. I noticed the hex graph, very nice, but how about an
> isometric/triangle graph. Then you could simulate 3D on a 2D
> drafting program. I also attached a pdf with this graph paper
> to see what i'm talking about.
Not a bad idea. Making new grids is not all that trivial, but the hex
grid code should be reusable to a large degree.
> 1. Why can't I rotate stuff/components? This seems like the first
> thing that would be put in?
Alas, it wasn't, and it's tough to retrofit. Occasionally, I consider
the idea of having SVG being the internal representation in Dia, but
that'd take a lot of work.
-Lars
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--
Michael Ross
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