Either you can use altitude option for a wall point - just enter "altitude ." to the line point options text editor, as Martin has written. This way we prefer. Or you can add -align option to your label - e.g. "-align tl" would probably help in your case (tl means top left).
Regards, S. 2008/5/6 Martin Sluka <martinsluka at mac.com>: > > > > On 6.5.2008, at 22:55, Ben Cooper wrote: > > > > > Can anyone advise me on this one? > The simplest way is to add to point of line "wall" the option "altitude ." > You should find in section "Line points" the black rectangle. Highlight the > point of wall you want to add the altitude and write "altitude ." there. > > "altitude <value> . can be speci ed only with the wall type. This option > creates an > altitude label on the wall. All altitudes are exported as a di erence > against grid Z > origin (which is 0 by default). If the value is speci ed, it gives the > altitude di erence > of the point on the wall relative to the nearest station. The value can be > pre xed by a > keyword \fix", then no nearest station is taken into consideration; the > absolute given > value is used instead. Units can follow the value. Examples: +4, [+4 m], > [fix 1510 > m]." > > > "7 General altitude label. All altitudes are exported as a di erence against > grid Z origin (which is 0 > by default). To display altitude on the passage wall, use altitude option > for any line point of the > passage wall." > > M. > > > _______________________________________________ > Therion mailing list > Therion at speleo.sk > http://www.speleo.sk/mailman/listinfo/therion > >
