On 30/11/2007, Allen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What? You never heard of LIFO stacks? Way the easiest to see an
e-mail in preview mode so that one can get through the mass of
e-mails that one is not really interested in.
Gmail?
Dotan Cohen
http://what-is-what.com
http://gibberish.co.il
On 29/11/2007, Joe Conner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Click on the line until it has focus. Right click for properties. You
can change the line width there.
Thank you Joe. I was able to successfully change two of the graphs
this way. However, this requires precision with the mouse, something
Dotan Cohen wrote:
On 29/11/2007, Joe Conner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Click on the line until it has focus. Right click for properties. You
can change the line width there.
Thank you Joe. I was able to successfully change two of the graphs
this way. However, this requires precision
On 29/11/2007, Joe Conner [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes there is! After you have focus established somewhere on the graph,
you can use the tab key and it will cycle through the chart components.
Thank you Joe! Hats off to the OOo developers.
Dotan Cohen
http://what-is-what.com
Dotan Cohen wrote:
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
What? You never heard of LIFO stacks? Way the easiest to see an
e-mail in preview mode so that one can get through the mass of
e-mails that one is not really
I currently have two graphs plotted on a single chart. Open Office
makes this rather easy, automatically giving each graph a different
colour. However, I need each graph to be of a different weight, ie
bold or thick line for one graph and a thin line for the other.
I have charted the
Click on the line until it has focus. Right click for properties. You
can change the line width there.
Dotan Cohen wrote:
I currently have two graphs plotted on a single chart. Open Office
makes this rather easy, automatically giving each graph a different
colour. However, I need each graph