Re: Normal graphs
- From: Michael Ross <michael e ross gmail com>
- To: hjjaholm arcor de, discussions about usage and development of dia <dia-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Normal graphs
- Date: Thu, 5 Apr 2012 12:59:06 -0400
I am not sure what is happening, but I will explain the basics and perhaps that will help.
There are two ways to create text, regular and outlined.
Outlined requires you to enter the text using the Properties dialog (right- click to activate), and you can change angle, and set the fill and stroke colors (background and outline).
The regular text has no outline, only color and font, size, etc. and it is edited on screen, using the editor tool (spacebar to activate). Some shapes have a text entry built into them and this regular text in its capabilities and edit method.
You can have a graph only by building it from primitive functions (line, ellipse, etc.) or it can be an imported image. Obviously, if it is a built graph you can write text as always.
With an imported image you can create text by the usual means - outlined or regular and have it reside "above the graph." There is no transparency function at this time. If you create text over an image and it is not visible then somehow the image has go above the text, or the text color is the same as the field below it.
I have placed this reply back on the Dia list so others can try to help ans so the answer is archived.
I am not a developer, so I try to help by answering simple questions. We have reached the limits of my ability to be helpful, and someone else will need to assist you going forward.
Mike
On Thu, Apr 5, 2012 at 10:14 AM, H.J. Holm
<hjjaholm arcor de> wrote:
This must be a misunderstanding:
In a happy moment I managed to write a text, then clicked on
"outlined" and it became outlined, as in happy old Atari times.
However, I never got this again. Why on earth does the program have
such phantastic abilities and one is unable to use them, that means
apply them in a graph?
Greetings
lingo.
Am 2012-04-03 20:01, schrieb Michael Ross:
You cannot draw "on" the graph, but you can certainly
have text that lies atop the image, just as all the other elements
an be in front of or behind each other.
If you really want the text to become part of the image i
would suggest Inkscape as a good program. If you don't know
Inkscape yet, it is a very nice open source vector drawing
program. Handles transparent layers too.
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