Hi Jianyuan,
Jianyuan Li schrieb:
Hi, Regina,
The attachment has been sent you directly.
Thanks, I've got the file. And the hint to [MS-ODRAW].pdf has been very
useful too. I think, I understand the values in mso..Segm[] now :)
Kind regards
Regina
2012/8/6 Jianyuan Li <[email protected]>
This time attachment is provided with doc file.
I think mso..Segm[] use a different numbering pattern. You can find more
details for them in MS specification "[MS-ODRAW].pdf".
2012/8/6 Regina Henschel <[email protected]>
Hi Jianyuan,
thanks for your answer. Unfortunately the attachment was stripped. Can
you please sent me the attachment directly or provide it for download?
Jianyuan Li schrieb:
Hi, Regina,
Below is my understanding for custom shape segment.
An segment is consist of two parts: command and count. It is described
with
an integer with two bytes. The high byte describes command and the low
byte
describes count. For the high byte, the high 3 bits is used to show the
basic command and the low 5 bits is used to show extended command. See my
attachment for details.
Taking "0x4000" as an example, it means command is moveto and count is 0.
Moveto is shown with "2" and occupy the first 3 bits of high byte. So
0x40
will be calculated.
The values shown in Basic follow the EnhancedCustomShapeSegmentComm**and
from the idl reference. There MOVETO is 1. Does mso..Segm[] use a different
numbering pattern?
Kind regards
Regina
2012/8/6 Regina Henschel <[email protected]>
Hi all,
I'm currently learning, how custom shapes work. I know already, how to
write them directly in the XML file format, I understand what I see in
Basic, I understand mso_sptxxxVer[], mso_sptxxxCalc[], and
mso_sptxxxGluePoints[].
But now I stuck with mso_sptxxxSegm[]. I understand the "Segments" as
they
are shown in Basic, but I cannot map that to mso_sptxxxSegm[].
For example for custom shape "Parallelogram" I see in Basic:
Command Count Command Count Command Count Command Count
1 1 2 3 4 0 5 0
which is
M L L L Z N
In mso_sptParallelogramSegm[] I read
0x4000, 0x0003, 0x6001, 0x8000
and have no idea, how that fits together.
Can someone give me a pointer or explain it to me?
Kind regards
Regina