I have no clue how to do that.




On Sat, Jun 17, 2017 at 6:31 PM, <cjgun...@gmail.com> wrote:

> The project is always accepting code donations from the volunteers who make
> the office suite.  If you would like to donate your code I am sure you
> would find
> a welcoming place to publish your code.
>
> On Saturday, June 17, 2017 2:09:38 PM PDT Dayvid Artman wrote:
> > First of all, it is annoying and seems a bit arrogant to force me to open
> > my email in your browser to send this message when I already have my
> email
> > open in a different browser. I also don't like the fact that said browser
> > removes (or at least hides from me) my signature stored in the email
> > service. But those are not the reason for the message.
> >
> > You have a function for working with tables that seems to have no useful
> > purpose, but the title given to it would be quite useful, and there
> doesn't
> > seem to be any way to actually do what the name of the function implies.
> > Microsoft Word has a function with nearly the exact same name, and it
> > functions as the name suggests and is very handy.
> >
> > The function in question is “Distribute Rows Equally”, and it is found
> > under the “Table” menu in the “Autofit” sub-menu. I read the Help on that
> > topic, and it functions exactly as described, but for no benefit that I
> can
> > imagine. The similar “Distribute Columns Evenly” operates nearly
> identical,
> > different only in that it is limited by the page size, while rows are
> not.
> >
> > What the function does in make every column (or row) match the largest
> one
> > in the selection. I can do that in several different ways without using
> > this function, and the name does not suggest that such will be the
> outcome.
> > It isn't “distributing” anything, it is simply expanding each row to the
> > size of the largest. What I want to do (and what the name implies what
> and
> > Microsoft does) is distribute the rows equally or evenly within the area
> of
> > the rows selected. The final table would occupy no more, no less, but
> > exactly the same space as the original, but the spacing of the rows would
> > all be the same.
> >
> > This supports providing as much space or as large a font as practical
> while
> > keeping a consistent look and staying (for example) on one page. There is
> > no easy way to do this that I know of without a command such as this. I
> > must somehow measure the total space that I want the finished table to
> > occupy, then manually divide that by the number of rows I want, and then
> > size each one to that size. Given certain scenarios, one could do that
> last
> > step en mass, but the first two steps are cumbersome and tedious. The
> > computer could do that in a moment, just as quickly as it does what it
> does
> > now, but with far more benefit.
> >
> > I strongly urge the team at Apache to consider making this design change.
> >
> > <https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_
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> > gn=sig-email&utm_content=webmail&utm_term=icon> Virus-free.
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>
>
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