The physical size of HTML picture files are governed by pixels only. The 
pictures in the Descendant Narrative Reports do not use tables but "align 
right" and, using the small picture setting all have a height of 100 pixels 
with the width calculated in proportion. Since I do not standardise picture 
sizes I cannot comment as to whether there is a variation in size other than 
that which I have created.

Ron Ferguson

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> Date: Fri, 28 Dec 2007 16:05:26 -0800
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: LegacyUserGroup@legacyfamilytree.com
> Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] mysterious photos
>
> "If pictures of the *same size* appear different on the *same page type*,
> then some other formatting code/command is making the difference."
>
> That's what I keep saying. It's got to be something other than the
> photos themselves.
>
> "If the HTML pages are created using table format, then the some rows may
> be divided into sections smaller than the width of the image. The image
> will probably be resized to fit the space available."
>
> Is that what Legacy is doing? I don't know.
>
> "If you're viewing the page in Internet Explorer, be sure to turn off
> Automatic Image Resizing (in IE, Tools -> Internet Options -> Advanced,
> scroll down to Automatic Image Resizing and uncheck it)"d
>
> I don't use IE. God forbid. And, of course, it doesn't take a web browser to 
> read a pdf.
>
> JLB
>
>
>
> John Carter wrote:
>> PDF files are intended for a printer with (typically) 300 dpi resolution.
>>
>> HTML files are intended for a screen with (typically) 72 or 96dpi resolution.
>>
>> The same number of pixels will cover more area on the HTML page than on
>> the PDF page.
>>
>> If pictures of the *same size* appear different on the *same page type*,
>> then some other formatting code/command is making the difference.
>>
>> If the HTML pages are created using table format, then the some rows may
>> be divided into sections smaller than the width of the image. The image
>> will probably be resized to fit the space available.
>>
>> If you're viewing the page in Internet Explorer, be sure to turn off
>> Automatic Image Resizing (in IE, Tools -> Internet Options -> Advanced,
>> scroll down to Automatic Image Resizing and uncheck it).
>>
>> John
>>
>>
>>
>>> I don't know what's confusing about that. The point is all these
>>> pictures are the same size and resolution. Why do they look different
>>> sizes in pdf and html reports?
>>>
>>> JLB
>>>
>>> curious wrote:
>>>
>>>> *There appears to be some confusion in the statement “300 pixels wide
>>>> and 200 dpi”*
>>>> *Any image 300 pixels wide is just that, 300 pixels in any format.*
>>>> *DPI (dots per inch) is a function of the print program:
>>>> - If you set the print at 300 dpi, you end up on paper with an image 1
>>>> inch wide
>>>> - If you set the print at 100 dpi, you end up on paper with an image 3
>>>> inches wide*
>>>> *The file image stored in your hard drive remains a 300 pixels wide
>>>> picture.*
>>>> *Cheers,
>>>> Boris*
>>>>
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> *From:* JLB 
>>>> *To:* LegacyUserGroup@legacyfamilytree.com
>>>> 
>>>> *Sent:* Thursday, December 27, 2007 21:21
>>>> *Subject:* Re: [LegacyUG] mysterious photos
>>>>
>>>> To recap: all my photos linked into Legacy are tiff's, 300 pixels
>>>> wide
>>>> and 200 dpi. Why do they show up different sizes in html and pdf
>>>> descendants reports?
>>>>

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