I have a project which will need to present a grid layout in which the columns are narrow but will be identified with text labels.

Ideally these would be at a 45-degree angle, so each could be clearly associated with the column they relate to but still be reasonably readable. But at worst I'd accept a fully-vertical orientation.

The speed to generate vertically-oriented text isn't a problem, since I could render it offscreen in a list field and make and image of that field and set its angle to 90. But I'd prefer 45 degrees, and that means doing each label in its own operation, not the speediest thing in the world since I may have up to a hundred or even two hundred labels to produce.

But that's not the hard part. The hardest part is printing. Argh. Printing an image of text will be jaggies-hell compared to the smooth appearance of native vector-rendered text.

I suppose I could render the text at 4 times actual size and then resize it down for display and printing on the card, but I'm concerned about that will alter the appearance, perhaps smoothing the image more than would be desirable (I haven't yet experimented with this to have any subjective feeling for how it looks).

Any of you doing angled or vertically-oriented text? Any tips you can share?


Also, do any of you know of a request in the RQCC for native support of non-horizontally oriented text? I just did a search for "text orientation" and came up with many hits but none for that.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Media Corporation
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