On Tuesday 17 July 2001 11:17, Toshitaka Fujioka wrote: > On Monday 16 July 2001 21:53, David Faure wrote: > > On Monday 16 July 2001 12:44, Toshitaka Fujioka wrote: > > > On Monday 16 July 2001 06:58, David Faure wrote: > > > > On Monday 16 July 2001 00:11, Toshitaka Fujioka wrote: > > > > > On Friday 13 July 2001 19:42, Toshitaka Fujioka wrote: > > > > > > Oops! :o Sorry, You're 100% right. This was bad patch(KWord). :( > > > > > > I remade patch. This patch completely works. ;) > > > > > > > > > > Oops!! Oh no, I did it again. :o > > > > > Sorry, the patch was not complete. :( > > > > > When "Line Spacing" was not "Single", XIM position was incomplete. > > > > > I remade a patch. Please review. > > > > > > > > Eek, this is horrible (sorry). We want to add more linespacings in the > > > > future, without having to update this code. To get the linespacing in > > > > pixels, just use parag->lineSpacing( linenumber ) - but I'm surprised > > > > you even have to do this. > > > > > > > > What are you trying to do exactly ? > > > > Getting the bottom of the cursor ? > > > > > > Yes. > > > > > > >(Simply use cPoint.y() + h) > > > > > > Hmm, this is right with "Line Spacing is Single". > > > > > > > Getting the bottom of the current line, including the linespacing ? > > > > > > This is a problem. Because, value is added to "h" when I changed > > > "Line Spacing". Position of XIM falls down to only value added to "h". > > > I must subtract added value from "h" in order to set position of XIM > > > to a bottom of cursor. > > > > Ok. Does it work better this way ? > > > > int line; > > cursor->parag()->lineStartOfChar( cursor->index(), 0, &line ); > > canvas->setXimPosition( cPoint.x(), cPoint.y(), 0, h - > > cursor->parag()->lineSpacing( line ) ); > > QPoint ximPoint = viewMode->normalToView( clip.topRight() ); Out of curiosity, why topRight ? Why does it depend on the clip rect ? >    canvas->setXimPosition( ximPoint.x(), ximPoint.y(), 0, h - cursor->parag()->lineSpacing( lineY ) ); lineY can't be right. That's a Y coordinate, whereas lineSpacing() takes a line _number_. That's what I was calculating in my patch: the line number of the line where the cursor is, and that's what you need when calling lineSpacing(). -- David FAURE, david@mandrakesoft.com, faure@kde.org http://perso.mandrakesoft.com/~david/, http://www.konqueror.org/ KDE, Making The Future of Computing Available Today _______________________________________________ Koffice-devel mailing list Koffice-devel@master.kde.org http://master.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/koffice-devel