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Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
Hi, I'm working with Excel 2007, and I am pretty happy with the antialiased
lines in the charts. However, the text for the axes and the axis titles is not anti aliased. I must be missing something, because i can't believe they wouldn't include this after antialiasing the charts. I'm looking at them in Excel, and pasting them as EMFs to a word document, and the fonts are not antialiased in either. So, does anyone know how to turn this on? I'm so close to being able to make scientific quality charts in Excel. Thanks for any help. |
Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
diehardii said: Hi, I'm working with Excel 2007, and I am pretty happy with the antialiased lines in the charts. However, the text for the axes and the axis titles is not anti aliased. I must be missing something, because i can't believe they wouldn't include this after antialiasing the charts. I'm looking at them in Excel, and pasting them as EMFs to a word document, and the fonts are not antialiased in either. So, does anyone know how to turn this on? I'm so close to being able to make scientific quality charts in Excel. What fonts are you using at the moment? -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
I'm currently using Garamond. Thanks for any help.
"Del Cotter" wrote: On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting, diehardii said: Hi, I'm working with Excel 2007, and I am pretty happy with the antialiased lines in the charts. However, the text for the axes and the axis titles is not anti aliased. I must be missing something, because i can't believe they wouldn't include this after antialiasing the charts. I'm looking at them in Excel, and pasting them as EMFs to a word document, and the fonts are not antialiased in either. So, does anyone know how to turn this on? I'm so close to being able to make scientific quality charts in Excel. What fonts are you using at the moment? -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
I think if you set up ClearType in Windows, you'll get your antialiased
text. I know ClearType antialiases text in Excel 2003 charts. I hated the fuzzy text, so I turned off ClearType. I also hate the antialiased lines in Excel 2007 charts. Try copying the chart as a picture and pasting it for use in another application. It is absolutely ugly, an abomination of visual display. The fuzzy text caused by ClearType was bad enough, but the chart elements are badly distorted, and you can't turn it off. Just my opinion, of course. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com _______ "diehardii" wrote in message ... I'm currently using Garamond. Thanks for any help. "Del Cotter" wrote: On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting, diehardii said: Hi, I'm working with Excel 2007, and I am pretty happy with the antialiased lines in the charts. However, the text for the axes and the axis titles is not anti aliased. I must be missing something, because i can't believe they wouldn't include this after antialiasing the charts. I'm looking at them in Excel, and pasting them as EMFs to a word document, and the fonts are not antialiased in either. So, does anyone know how to turn this on? I'm so close to being able to make scientific quality charts in Excel. What fonts are you using at the moment? -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
Jon Peltier said: I think if you set up ClearType in Windows, you'll get your antialiased text. I know ClearType antialiases text in Excel 2003 charts. I hated the fuzzy text, so I turned off ClearType. I also hate the antialiased lines in Excel 2007 charts. Try copying the chart as a picture and pasting it for use in another application. It is absolutely ugly, an abomination of visual display. The fuzzy text caused by ClearType was bad enough, but the chart elements are badly distorted, and you can't turn it off. I'm sorry to hear the lines look bad. I was looking forward to anti-aliased symbols, as it's one of the most ugly things about the line and scatter charts I try to create in pre-2007 XL. Also the lack of anti-aliasing in Autoshapes, leading to ugliness like this: http://i146.photobucket.com/albums/r...s/rockstar.png I tried various techniques to maximise the size and thus the resolution of an Excel chart, to avoid the mess with the little human figures, and that was the best I managed. (PS if I was doing that chart today, it would be Tornado, not Stacked Bar) -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
Anti aliasing fonts in titles and axes?
"Del Cotter" wrote in message ... On Mon, 28 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting, Jon Peltier said: I think if you set up ClearType in Windows, you'll get your antialiased text. I know ClearType antialiases text in Excel 2003 charts. I hated the fuzzy text, so I turned off ClearType. I also hate the antialiased lines in Excel 2007 charts. Try copying the chart as a picture and pasting it for use in another application. It is absolutely ugly, an abomination of visual display. The fuzzy text caused by ClearType was bad enough, but the chart elements are badly distorted, and you can't turn it off. I'm sorry to hear the lines look bad. I was looking forward to anti-aliased symbols, as it's one of the most ugly things about the line and scatter charts I try to create in pre-2007 XL. Also the lack of anti-aliasing in Autoshapes, leading to ugliness like this: http://i146.photobucket.com/albums/r...s/rockstar.png I tried various techniques to maximise the size and thus the resolution of an Excel chart, to avoid the mess with the little human figures, and that was the best I managed. (PS if I was doing that chart today, it would be Tornado, not Stacked Bar) I would make a dot plot with two series. Since the tornado series go in opposite directions, it's hard to compare them. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com _______ |
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