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From: | Carl Sorensen |
Subject: | Re: Distance of a grob from its reference point |
Date: | Wed, 15 Jan 2020 23:22:25 +0000 |
User-agent: | Microsoft-MacOutlook/10.10.10.191111 |
From:
Paolo Prete <address@hidden> I don't mean that with *broken*. I mean that it's unusable, given that the values you put inside this function don't correspond to anything that you can measure. Then, pretty random values.
Please note that this doesn't happen with \override SomeGrob.X/Y-offset. In that case, you can measure the offset with a ruler (in a very uncomfortable way, though, given that you have to offset the ruler as well
with the ref point of the grob). Yes, this is true. Because when you \override you replace the unpure-pure-container estimate function with a fixed constant value. \offset adds a fixed constant value to the existing result, which is an *estimate* rather than an actual value in the case of a Y-offset whose default value is a unpure-pure-container function. The fact that you are offsetting
an estimate leads to random values, since the difference between the estimate and the actual value is not predictable before completing the spacing algorithm. Thanks, Carl |
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