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Why are the edges of all pie charts jagged? Is there a way to make them
perfect circles with smooth edges? |
#2
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When I make a pie chart in Excel, I can see the jaggedness corresponding to
the pixels in the monitor. But when I print out the chart, the scale of jaggedness is reduced to the printer resolution, so it appears much smoother. Have you copied/pasted the chart into another program or into an image file? - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com/ _______ "Rachel" wrote in message ... Why are the edges of all pie charts jagged? Is there a way to make them perfect circles with smooth edges? |
#3
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That is primarily where I use them. I copy them into PowerPoint and
Publisher. So is my best bet to work on my printer resolution? We are trying to stay away from use images or pictures - as the charts are often updated and there is a desire to keep excel and formulas pure. Thanks. "Jon Peltier" wrote: When I make a pie chart in Excel, I can see the jaggedness corresponding to the pixels in the monitor. But when I print out the chart, the scale of jaggedness is reduced to the printer resolution, so it appears much smoother. Have you copied/pasted the chart into another program or into an image file? - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com/ _______ "Rachel" wrote in message ... Why are the edges of all pie charts jagged? Is there a way to make them perfect circles with smooth edges? |
#4
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Hi Rachel -
This is probably the best approach: 1. Select the chart. 2. Hold down Shift while you select Copy Picture from the Edit menu (Shift changes Copy to Copy Picture). 3. Choose the On Screen and Picture options (not Bitmap, which is likely part of your problem). 4. In the target application (PowerPoint/Publisher), do a simple Paste. This pastes a metafile, which is the collection of shapes, lines, and text that make a chart. These drawing objects will be rendered by the receiving application at whatever resolution they use for their native drawing objects, and you can rescale them without (too much) distortion. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com/ _______ "Rachel" wrote in message ... That is primarily where I use them. I copy them into PowerPoint and Publisher. So is my best bet to work on my printer resolution? We are trying to stay away from use images or pictures - as the charts are often updated and there is a desire to keep excel and formulas pure. Thanks. "Jon Peltier" wrote: When I make a pie chart in Excel, I can see the jaggedness corresponding to the pixels in the monitor. But when I print out the chart, the scale of jaggedness is reduced to the printer resolution, so it appears much smoother. Have you copied/pasted the chart into another program or into an image file? - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com/ _______ "Rachel" wrote in message ... Why are the edges of all pie charts jagged? Is there a way to make them perfect circles with smooth edges? |
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