I have some experience with it, but I'm no graphics guru.
Why don't you just post the questions up?
The size on the screen depends on your resolution and whether or not you're zooming it and varies between computers and users. The measurements represent "real life" measurements or what it would (or should) look like on paper. So if you were to print the document, the measurements should match what you were expecting.
That's how I understand it anyway.
Well think about this... if you had a 19" monitor at, say, an arbitrary resolution of 2000x1000 (making these up) and another 19" monitor at 4000x2000; the second screen will essentially have 4 times the display space of the first one in the same physical space, so everything on it will appear smaller. Likewise, if you had two monitors with the exact same resolution but one of them was bigger, the size of the stuff on the screen will be different as well. Monitors are somewhat "abstract" in this way; depending on the resolution and other settings, two identical drawings might appear to be differently sized on different computers.It's kinda weird it just looks so different, I really can't understand how it works. If I only had a printer.
It might if Word does some kinda fancy magic scaling stuff with the DPI that I'm not aware of, but probably not.How about copying the square from inkscape to msword? will there be any difference? Will the size change?
Well think about this... if you had a 19" monitor at, say, an arbitrary resolution of 2000x1000 (making these up) and another 19" monitor at 4000x2000; the second screen will essentially have 4 times the display space of the first one in the same physical space, so everything on it will appear smaller. Likewise, if you had two monitors with the exact same resolution but one of them was bigger, the size of the stuff on the screen will be different as well. Monitors are somewhat "abstract" in this way; depending on the resolution and other settings, two identical drawings might appear to be differently sized on different computers.
Because of this, physical dimensions of things you're working on will practically never match the dimensions on the computer's screen.
It might if Word does some kinda fancy magic scaling stuff with the DPI that I'm not aware of, but probably not.
Shouldn't you be using a cad program for something like this?
A CAD program would be a bit of an overkill, that's something you'd use when designing a house or a complex piece of machinery.
A CAD program would be a bit of an overkill, that's something you'd use when designing a house or a complex piece of machinery.
Not really. CAD software is for designing anything, whether it be obnoxiously small or ridiculously big, or anything in between. Size is irrelevant. CAD software is aimed to help you draw something very precisely, and very easily. Oh, you want this part to be 10" long? Okay, click line and type in 10, etc.
It's made so that you can easily design anything you can think of. So in this situation, it's perfect. and there are free cad software programs out there. Though if you could get your hands on a copy of AutoCAD, that would be ideal. They do free students programs and free trials, as far as i remember. \
If you want to go in this direction, let me know and i'd be glad to help.![]()