To comment on the following update, log in, then open the issue: http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=98256
------- Additional comments from uwega...@openoffice.org Wed Jan 21 02:36:46 +0000 2009 ------- I realized that graphics are differently displayed dependent from the font size of the operating system. I don't work with the standard font size of 96 dpi but with 144 dpi. With this font size my screen width is filled with an A4 page scaled to 100%. Now I switched to 96 dpi what should also be your font size. With this font size I also do not see a difference with files created with a Windows Vista font size of 144 dpi. I am attaching 3 files: 1) Another odt-file created with a Windows Vista font size of 96 dpi containing two instances of the same graphic. Now you really should see a clear difference. 2) A screenshot how it looks on my screen. 3) The original graphic as png file so that this graphic can be inserted on your computer. On my computer the problem is visible with both font sizes. step by step instructions: I suppose that it is known how to open and view an odt file in Writer and a screenshot in a graphic editor. If you even cannot see a difference in the screenshot please enlarge the file at least to 300%. Now really everybody should see a difference between the two graphics. You can create this difference for yourself by using the third file. For this file open writer and a new document. Open the "screenshot 96dpi.png" in Paint. Copy the graphic into the clipboard. Paste it into the new Writer document with Paste special / Bitmap. Press esc. Press Enter two times. Paste the same graphic a second time into Writer with Paste special / Bitmap. Double click on this graphic. Resize it a little bit by setting left to 0,02 and bottom to 0,02. Press OK. On my computer the graphic is blurred now. Perhaps I will hear the next objection at this point. mru replied to my first posting: "Both graphics in the attached document look blurred, because they are resized with non-equal aspect ratio." If he really thinks that a resize "with non-equal aspect ratio" did change the content of the graphic then this is the bug: I left the standard setting keep scale (not sure about the correct english term, it's the first radio button in the dialog) in both graphics. With this setting the remaining content of a graphic must not change at all, regardless of the settings in left, right, top and bottom! These settings must only cut a piece of the margin on the left, right, upper and down side of a graphic without changing the remainder of the graphic! The remainder of the graphic must not change even in the case that only on one side a piece of the margin is cut. Only with the second radio button the remainder of the graphic can be stretched or compressed! I want to ask you to confirm the functions of the two radio buttons because the explantaion of mru is wrong. The function of the first radio buttom is to keep the remainder of a graphic unchanged even if the graphic is cutted on one of its margins. The function of the second radio button is to stretch or compress the graphic inside the unchanged area. This radio button can explain a change of the appearance of a graphic, the first radio button cannot explain such a change! Please try the functions for yourself, despite the blurred appearance these buttons work as I described it. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Please do not reply to this automatically generated notification from Issue Tracker. Please log onto the website and enter your comments. http://qa.openoffice.org/issue_handling/project_issues.html#notification --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: issues-unsubscr...@sw.openoffice.org For additional commands, e-mail: issues-h...@sw.openoffice.org --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: allbugs-unsubscr...@openoffice.org For additional commands, e-mail: allbugs-h...@openoffice.org