Patrick JUSSEAU a écrit :
Setting the font-size for the surrounding fo:block to the max size of
its inline children (60pt here) does produce a better result but the
text is still not completely vertically center aligned (There seems to
be more space below the text than above it).
Actually not: i
On 23 Mar 2005, at 19:20, Vincent Hennebert wrote:
Andreas L. Delmelle a écrit :
I would like to put, on the same line, several texts
that have different font sizes. For example the word
"BIG" in 60pt followed by the word "SMALL" in 40pt.
The following FO code does not completely work since
the tex
Andreas L. Delmelle a écrit :
I would like to put, on the same line, several texts
that have different font sizes. For example the word
"BIG" in 60pt followed by the word "SMALL" in 40pt.
The following FO code does not completely work since
the text baseline is vertically centered in the parent
blo
> -Original Message-
> From: Patrick JUSSEAU [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
Hi,
> I would like to put, on the same line, several texts
> that have different font sizes. For example the word
> "BIG" in 60pt followed by the word "SMALL" in 40pt.
> The following FO code does not completely work
> -Original Message-
> From: Peter B. West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> If you are on a linux system, man utf-8 explains it well. The Unicode
> manual has an appendix on transformations, which is probably available
> online.
Big 'THANKS' for the clarification! (Although I should've bee
Hi,
I am trying to achieve something that looks like a basic thing to do
but I can't find a way to do it. I would like to put, on the same line,
several texts that have different font sizes. For example the word
"BIG" in 60pt followed by the word "SMALL" in 40pt. The following FO
code does not
Hi,
I am trying to achieve something that looks like a basic thing to do
but I can't find a way to do it. I would like to put, on the same line,
several texts that have different font sizes. For example the word
"BIG" in 60pt followed by the word "SMALL" in 40pt. The following FO
code does not
We're not really JFOR support although JFOR has been integrated into FOP
and RTF support will be part of the next release.
Anyway, the fact that you're talking about Linux brings some warning
lights up. JFOR is optimized for MS Word which is not available for
Linux. What application do you use to
Quoting Pascal Sancho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hi Jake,
This seems to be a specific svg question.
You should ask it in a svg list.
Oh, yeah, of course. That would be the batik mailing list. Sorry, I didnt
even
think :)
However, You can use this:
...
In a left-to-right context, your x coordinate corres
Klearchou Klearchos wrote:
Hello all,
I am trying to generate the xml file from a ttf file in order to use it with
my FOP Engine.
I run win2k.
I run it exactly as the instructions write but I always take a
FileNotFoundException.
java -cp
"fop.jar;avalon-framework.jar;xml-apis.jar;xercesImpl.jar;xal
Hi,
FOP 0.20.5 doesn't support content-xxx.
Use 'height' and 'width' attributes instead.
Pascal
> -Message d'origine-
> De : [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> I use jfor but does not suppport content-height and
> content-width for external image.
> My problem is the on l
Hi Jake,
This seems to be a specific svg question.
You should ask it in a svg list.
However, You can use this:
...
In a left-to-right context, your x coordinate corresponds to the right
edge of the text box.
You can then easily locate your chart.
Pascal
> -Message d'origine-
> De : Jak
I use jfor but does not suppport content-height and content-width for external
image.
My problem is the on linux the image rendered are bigger than normal...on
window that 's not happen...
U know any alternative way for setting size for fo:external-graphic?
_
Hi All
I have a little problem. I need to draw a barchart in svg, imbedded in
fo which is produced in xsl. The problem is, how do i know where to draw
the y axis?
What i mean is, If i want numbers on the left side of the axis thus :
|
15 |
10 |
5 |
0 |___
|
How do i know at
Andreas L. Delmelle wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Peter B. West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi Peter,
is A0 in hex; 1100 in binary.
Slight adjustment... 160 = 2^7 + 2^5, so 1010 ? (Fresh out of bed, ay?
;-))
Precisely. And I'm not good in the morning.
I was thinking along the
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