I would like to increase the row height of the rows in the query results. I like big fonts and at some point the font becomes too big for the row.
Example: Everything is fine with font size 19:
But with font size 22, which is what I like, the underscore disappears:
Any suggestions on how to achieve this? Or other ideas to have the results (and the code, as this uses the same font size setting) in a big font? Searching google and the preferences of Oracle SQL Developer didn't help.
The best I can offer you is to leave the grid and print to the script output area. There's no restriction of line width height there.
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I have a field that I'm displaying on a report that is a combination of text and codes that represent an image. Some of those icons have ascii symbols that I've used a replace formula to display them as their ascii version. For two or three of the images, I have no luck and have to display a mini picture for the representation.
The codes being sent are something like:
^he^ = ♥ ^st^ = ⭐ ^cl^ = 🍀 etc...
So for the clover leaf, there is no emoji support in my version of Crystal for clover leaves, and the ascii icon I found online for it just shows the empty square icon when an emoji isn't supported.
My workaround for this is to have a formula that converts all my icons to the appropriate ascii where supported, and to leave two blank spaces for the unsupported icons.
>stringvar gift_msg;
>gift_msg:= {DataTable1.gift_field};
>gift_msg := replace(gift_msg,"^CL^"," ");
>gift_msg := replace(gift_msg,"^HE^","♥");
>gift_msg := replace(gift_msg,"^ST^","★");
>gift_msg
I then put a suppression formula on each image that looks like this:
>mid({DataTable1.gift_field},2,4)<>"^CL^"
So I duplicated the image along the length of the field and increment the mid formula to match the field. I also set the font to Consolas so that it's fixed width to remove any surprises in spacing. My issue is that this still creates very strange spacing, and I'm almost certain there's a much easier way to do this.
One option is to use a free service such as Calligraphr.com to convert your image to a font.
Given that your image relies on several colors, the font option might not work.
Another option is to build the expression as html with image source directives where you need them. You would then need a create or use a 3rd-party UFL to convert the full expression to an image that you can load on the fly using the Graphic Location expression. At least one of the UFLs listed by Ken Hamady here provides such a function.
I have a Html file which is roughly 4.3MB contains a table with 6 columns and 10k rows. Each cell contains 1-10 characters, has only "class" attribute for its style which is very simple (font family, font size, text color and cell color).
I converted this file to Pdf but EvoPdf used almost 11GB RAM (I built my project to run on 64bit) and crashed my IIS but didn't return any result. I tried with fewer row (5k) and EvoPdf did return result but still use a lot memory. And the result is almost 150MB.
I don't know I did anything wrong there.
And for my settings, I use repeat table header and embed font.
Can someone help me?
Thank you.
I am new to fop , will be greatful if i get help from someone...,
I am not using XSLT tranformation but creating XSLFO file directly using Java code. Everything works fine but the problem comes when particular word(long text without space) is inserted into a cell of a table-column . That bigger word is overlapping the successive block.
I have an fo:block element in fo:table-cell which is in fo:table-row of a fo:table. This table has 6 columns, obviously column width is small. Now, when a Word in the block is larger than the block it is overlapping the next block. Give me some attribute value or any other solution to change my XSLFO file ,so that the bigger word breaks into the new line at end of the column.
Thanks in advance...
The things you need to look into are:
For the fo:table-cell: number-columns-spanned="3"
For setting the width of fo:table-column: column-width="proportional-column-width(1.5)"
The number-columns-spanned is used as attribute of and provides you with a means to select a bigger area where your fo:block fits.
The column-width makes it easy to define absolute width or, when using proportional-column-width, a width relative to the other columns.
I don't know of a way that lets FOP break words into multiple parts when they don't fit.
I'm trying to create a dialer-like application:
I'm using [UIFont systemFontOfSize:33]. The problem is that the Asterisk symbol is too small in comparison to the numbers and '#'.
I printed 123*# in all 61 available iOS6 fonts and the star is smaller than other chars in all of them.
Does somebody have an idea how to solve this?
One thing I tried is changing font size only for * button. That works, but when I hit this button it appears small [off course] in the input above...
Hope my Question is clear.
Thanks.
Use a different character for the display. In Xcode, click on the Edit menu and select Special Characters. When the character viewer appears, type "asterisk" into the search field. Try one of the many other related symbols.
Depending on how you do this, you may need to replace the used symbol with a proper asterisk internally to use the result in a tel URL.
You can use attributedString and change the font size to big enough of all asterisks
In Crystal Reports 2008, I need to have an accurate count of all of the lines that have been displayed in a sub report.
I'm using a shared variable and incrementing as needed when lines display. The only problem I'm having now is when a field wraps. We are not using a fixed width font, so going by field length does not solve the issue, as 'i' is not as wide as 'w' and so on.
Is there a way to find out if the data in a field will be wrapped, and if so how many lines it wraps to, or is there a way to find out what the height of the section that the field is in (or the field itself) has grown too?
Or, is there an even better way to count how many lines have actually displayed on the sub report?
No, there is no way to do what you describe.
If you used a fixed-width font, you could then do some math based based on "it wraps at X characters" do if length of string is 100, then it went 2 lines, etc.