No I had more in mind:
1. The argument room
and perhaps:
2. Well I didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition
It's like asking a question like, Excuse me, can you tell me how to
get to First and Main Street, and getting 5 replies like Oh come
now, why would anybody want to go to First and Main
: Saturday, August 18, 2001 2:26 AM
Subject: Re: Venn diagram program?
Yes, I am using Powerpoint now. It's harder than it sounds, because
one must calculate the radius' that give appropriately scaled circle
areas; and one can only guess how close to move the circles to give
John Uebersax wrote:
Can anyone suggest a standalone Windows (or DOS) that produces
publication quality Venn diagrams?
...
The diagram should show the area of each circle as proportional its N,
and the overlap area as proprotional to the number of cases in both
groups.
Is this
Thanks Alan for the constructive reply. The others so far remind me
of a Monty Python routine.
Yes, I am using Powerpoint now. It's harder than it sounds, because
one must calculate the radius' that give appropriately scaled circle
areas; and one can only guess how close to move the circles to
Yes, I am using Powerpoint now. It's harder than it sounds, because
one must calculate the radius' that give appropriately scaled circle
areas; and one can only guess how close to move the circles to give
the correct overlap area.
I use rectangular areas in Power Point. That make
You can draw Venn diagrams very easily in Powerpoint using the
ellipse/circle and box/rectangle tools. Draw the diagram, group all the
bits together, and copy it into Word or whatever.
Whether it is 'publication quality' depends on your definition of htis
term.
Alan
Donald Burrill wrote:
At 10:40 AM 8/17/01 +1000, Alan McLean wrote:
You can draw Venn diagrams very easily in Powerpoint using the
ellipse/circle and box/rectangle tools. Draw the diagram, group all the
bits together, and copy it into Word or whatever.
Whether it is 'publication quality' depends on your definition of