Tony,
Thanks. I appreciate the information
--
Greg Maxey
See my web site
http://gregmaxey.mvps.org
for an eclectic collection of Word Tips.
"Tony Jollans" My forename at my surname dot com wrote in message
...
Generally speaking, the internal unit used is the twip (equal to one
twentieth of a point), so the, presumably accurate, 85.0397 is rounded to
85.05 (85 and one twentieth) points.
This rounding, partly at least, explains why some fine adjustments cannot
be made, or appear not to 'take'.
--
Enjoy,
Tony
www.WordArticles.com
"Greg Maxey" wrote in message
...
An interesting point came up in a docManagment post.
The Paragraph dialog box has an option for setting paragraph spacing
before and after. The unit of measurement displayed in this option is
points (pt). However, a user may enter other acceptable units of measure
(e.g., centimeters (cm)) and Word converts this entry to points. Enter 3
cm click OK, open the dialog again and it displays 85.05 pt.
If you convert 3 cm to points programmatically Word returns 85.03937.
Close enough of course, but what is the actual true physical space
applied and what is that central unit of measurement employed internally
in Word?
Sub GetPointEquivelent()
MsgBox CentimetersToPoints(3)
End Sub
Is the actual space 85.0397 points and the dialog rounds to and displays
85.05? Or is the actual space determined by some other unit of measure
that approximates both 85.05 points and 3 cm?
Thanks.
--
Greg Maxey
See my web site http://gregmaxey.mvps.org
for an eclectic collection of Word Tips.