I'm not 100% sure, but I believe that DIN or ISO A4 just is 210.00 * 297.00 more correct (considering where Din comes from) I'm not sure where you take the 209.90*297.04 in document prefs from... when caculating A4 with the way it is derived (A0 = 1m², a/b = b/(2a) ) I get 210.22*297.30
That is [1/sqrt(sqrt(2)) / 4 * 1000] * [sqrt(sqrt(2)) / 4 * 1000]
David
I'm not 100% sure, but I believe that DIN or ISO A4 just is 210.00 * 297.00 more correct (considering where Din comes from) I'm not sure where you take the 209.90*297.04 in document prefs from...
I'm not sure also. I see 210x297 in my document prefs with the default template. (That is, after I switch the units to mm.)
On Do, 2004-10-21 at 09:31 -0300, bulia byak wrote:
I'm not 100% sure, but I believe that DIN or ISO A4 just is 210.00 * 297.00 more correct (considering where Din comes from) I'm not sure where you take the 209.90*297.04 in document prefs from...
I'm not sure also. I see 210x297 in my document prefs with the default template. (That is, after I switch the units to mm.)
Yeah, correct, that is the standard template, but the A4 template is different.
David Christian Berg <david@...407...> wrote in news:1098016086.1176.56.camel@...33...:
I'm not 100% sure, but I believe that DIN or ISO A4 just is 210.00 * 297.00 more correct (considering where Din comes from) I'm not sure where you take the 209.90*297.04 in document prefs from... when caculating A4 with the way it is derived (A0 = 1m², a/b = b/(2a) ) I get 210.22*297.30
FYI: It's correct that A4 (per ISO 216) should be *exactly* 210 × 297 mm. The calculation rounds down after each division, to ensure that two AN pages will always fit a A(N-1) page.
participants (3)
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bulia byak
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David Christian Berg
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Karl Ove Hufthammer