Well, since the software was designed by people that don't actually use it
in combat, it probably works differently in some ways than we'd like. The
plot outside area (encompassing the axes etc.) keeps its shape pretty well,
but that's not the dimension that people care about.
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com
_______
"mark" wrote in message
...
Jon,
I have never tried using VBA so this will be a first. I am amazed at how
complicated something seemingly simple is in this case.
Thank you.
"Jon Peltier" wrote:
You can nail it down more precisely using VBA. The problem is that
changes
to the axis labels change the size of the interior plotting rectangle, so
you'd have to run the macro iteratively. There are some examples on my
web
site:
http://peltiertech.com/Excel/Charts/SquareGrid.html
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com
_______
"mark" wrote in message
...
Another problem I found is that even when you scale it to a square, the
default printing scheme will stretch to the page. To overcome this I
had
to
go to print preview-setup-chart- and select "scale to page" instead of
"fit
to page".
It seems silly that excel has many formulas, is routinely used to solve
equations, yet can't make the scale on two axes equal. Where is the
"engineer" in "computer engineer"?
-mark
I would like it to be exact, however, I do appreciate this suggestion.
It
kind of boggles me that you can't just "lock the aspect ratio" of your
graph,
however, you can to draw a square.
"James Silverton" wrote:
David wrote on Fri, 19 May 2006 22:10:35 +0100:
?? "James Silverton" wrote:
??
?? mark wrote on Fri, 19 May 2006 12:35:02 -0700:
??
m The xy scatter chart seem to allow you to change the
m scale on the x and y axis independently and then
m automatically stretches the axis (x and y) to fit the
m page. the result is that the graph is not true scale in
m both directions.
?? But you can make the units of x and y the same and make
?? the chart area square by clicking on it and moving the
?? markers. I don't know how to do this automatically but I
?? can do it satisfactorily, IMHO, by eye. I suppose I could
?? hold a ruler to the monitor to make it more exact.
?? I really need it to be exact. I've used the method of
?? stretching the graph, but to get it correct, you do end up
?? printing, measureing, adjusting, etc.
DB One trick is to use the rectangle drawing tool (with the
DB shift key) to daw a square, then adjust the scaling of the
DB chart (or stretch it) to match the gridlines to the square.
That is a bit "tricky" but I just tried it and it can be done
tho' you have to remember to set the scale height and width the
same (probably 100%) when drawing the square if you want it to
print correctly. I don't know if I could meet the criteria of
exactness that the OP wants :-)
James Silverton.