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transparent background

gLanzer
1-Visitor

transparent background

hello

is there a way for mathcad to export images (of the math regions) with a transparent background?

all i can do is save it as a webpage and get all the math regions as png or jpeg files then copy&paste the to PPT

but those have white background and i can't use most of my templates (for powerpoint).

btw, why ppt? we need to present it in class and a ppt presentation is required.

another question:

is it possible that mathcad show like this?

x:=1

y:=x+1

y=(1)+1=2

can mathcad show the substituted values?

it is easier to understand solutions this way especially when working with very long equations..

thanks.

ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

btw, still no over bar and dots in mathcad variables?

Not completely true. You can have dots, asterisks and other special symbols as variable by pressing ctrl, shift and k after a variable.

There was a thread the other week about the overbarred symbol.

Have a look at the attached worksheet. Keep the font either Times New Roman or Arial and it looks OK.

View solution in original post

19 REPLIES 19

another question:

is it possible that mathcad show like this?

x:=1

y:=x+1

y=(1)+1=2

See please:

http://twt.mpei.ac.ru/ochkov/Mathcad_14/Chapter1/1_018_All_Values_Step_by_Step.png

thanks.

i didn't encounter that explicit "function" in my reference book (eng'g with mathcad)..

a newbie btw..

many thanks!

btw, still no over bar and dots in mathcad variables?

-------------

also, attached is my another problem..

i know that mathcad computes T1 in kelvin,

but, can it show that T1 (in rankine or kelvin) in the explicit evaluation?

i'm encountering errors when i declare T1:=40degF = 499.67R

yet making T1:=40degF (given in the problem statement that's why i declare it as such) clears the error but

it shows T1 in degF (in the explicit,rpc,T1,k) which is partially wrong since the equation needs absolute temperatures (in K but R will do)

mathcad gives the right answer, T2s=944.508R, but a misleading explicit solution..

is there anything that i can do?

or am i just stuck in

T1=40degF

T1:=499.67R

btw, still no over bar and dots in mathcad variables?

Not completely true. You can have dots, asterisks and other special symbols as variable by pressing ctrl, shift and k after a variable.

There was a thread the other week about the overbarred symbol.

Have a look at the attached worksheet. Keep the font either Times New Roman or Arial and it looks OK.

Something like below?

Clipboard01.jpg

Can't you highlight the region and copy that image. At least the background won't be white then.

is there a way for mathcad to export images (of the math regions) with a transparent background?

all i can do is save it as a webpage and get all the math regions as png or jpeg files then copy&paste the to PPT

but those have white background and i can't use most of my templates (for powerpoint).

You can just select regions and paste straight into Microsoft paint you know. Might save you a little time.

Mike

still has some white background..

anyway, i figured out yesterday that can just use ms office "set transparent color" (first tried photoshop magic eraser but can't manage the letters like "q,e,d etc)"

thanks

(for the general reader)

The background colour can be set by clicking on a blank (background) area of the worksheet, and then selecting Format>>Colour>>Background..

Unfortunately, at the moment (I'm using V14 M030), you can't set it to "transparent". However it does look like you have a workaround, and being able to set the background colour to a special shade is likely to help some folks.

I also use the View>>Regions options a lot to identify where my regions are (and by zooming to 25% you can see left-over stray off-screen regions the create print problems)

Finally, if you press control before clicking on a region it will do a dotted line select, which is what you want for pasting direct into Word or Powerpoint - Don't forget to use Paste Special, otherwise the whole worksheet gets pasted as an OLE and you give away all your IPR !

- and if you receive a Word or Powerpoint with a Mathcad region or graph you shouldn't be double clicking to see if it is active and then scrolling around it... <shocked>

Philip

Unfortunately, at the moment (I'm using V14 M030), you can't set it to "transparent". However it does look like you have a workaround, and being able to set the background colour to a special shade is likely to help some folks.

I am unaware that this can be done in any Mathcad - Am I mistaken?

Mike

Hi Mike,

Mike Armstrong wrote:

Unfortunately, at the moment (I'm using V14 M030), you can't set it to "transparent". However it does look like you have a workaround, and being able to set the background colour to a special shade is likely to help some folks.

I am unaware that this can be done in any Mathcad - Am I mistaken?

Mike

Yes "you are mistaken" , It (being able to set the background colour) is one of the many hidden things you can do if only there was a good manual to read it from.

The "No" would be that the one colour you can't set it to is transparent !

Another hidden thing is being able to set tabs for text regions, which can only be done if you show the ruler, which then only appears when you are in the text region, and only then can you click on the ruler bar to place a tab.....

If you set a tab on the visible ruler when you are not in a text region you are setting the tab locations for moving the (red +) cursor around the screen for region initiation. But you can't align regions to those tabs .

Also it's only at that time that you can show a green guideline for the tab (you have to be accurate with your right mouse click on the tab symbol in the ruler).

Philip

Yes "you are mistaken" , It (being able to set the background colour) is one of the many hidden things you can do if only there was a good manual to read it from.

The "No" would be that the one colour you can't set it to is transparent !

My question was regarding being able to set the background colour as transparent, I am aware that the background colour can be changed.

I use the ruler for aligning regions within my calculations. I find the feature quite useful to be honest, it saves trying to eyeball all the regions manually.

Mike

Just thought of another way.

You could copy the Math regions and paste into MS paint and fill the background regions that way. Not sure if the colour can be set to transparent, but it can be changed from White.

Mike

LucMeekes
23-Emerald III
(To:gLanzer)

Hi,

I usually copy at least 2 regions at the same time and then paste that into any office application. I use a grey background in Mathcad, but that doesn't show in Office, so it's transparent enough I guess. Every region pasted in the office application appears embedded in a container that tries to keep the object at a specific (page) location. In the office application I can cut the region contents out of that container, paste it elsewhere and delete the container. Then (in MsWord or Outlook) the region moves with text rather than trying to stick to a location.

The trouble when copying/pasting only one region is that I get a different object into office, one that takes substantially more time paste: it might be the complete Mathcad worksheet is transferred with a view/window on just the part that I tried to copy/paste. If I need to transfer only one region, I still copy/paste two, and subsequently delete the superfluous one...

Hope this helps.

Luc

Got the answer...... I think.

  • Copy the selected Math regions
  • Click Paste Special in Powerpoint or whatever Microsoft product to are using.
  • Choose Picture (Windows Metafile)

hallelujah - screen shot of Power5point attached.

Mike

Well, this is a very useful discussion...I have used variations of these methods. Never had to copy 2 regions...I usually copy one at a time, and it works OK. I recently found a problem that I couldn't get around unless I pasted into Word as a bitmap...when I use h_bar in my Mathcad docs.

It seems that whether I paste as a Mathcad doc object OR as a metafile, I don't get the h-bar. If I paste as a bitmap, I get the h-bar, but image quality suffers.

I /can/ edit the metafile, but not satisfactorily. I guess that I have been for the most part "lucky" because I use the dotted-line-copy and paste method, delete the box (as above) and use the result. Works 99.44% of the time, except when I run into those pesky chars that don't translate well, even when the font is on y computer. I think that this is equivalent to using Paste Special>metafile.

~R~

The paste special method was actually given to me from a former collab member. Seems to work nice though.

Works 99.44% of the time,

Have you really been keeping track? Seems a unique percentage.

Mike

thanks

i always forgot the paste special of ms office (except when i'm working in excel)

btw, any idea on how to seperate regions with the same spacing?

separate regions, and align regions are ok but not don't provide a nice spacing between two regions..

also, i apologize, i made a mistake on choosing the "correct answer"..

mike's got it.

also, i apologize, i made a mistake on choosing the "correct answer"..

mike's got it.

You gave it to me, or do you mean I shouldn't have it

Mike

i mean, if you click thhe 'go to answer', it points out to the overbar issue, not the trasnparent background issue you had solved for me.

anyway, thanks.

I get you.

Never mind, I still get the gold star.

Mike

btw, any idea on how to seperate regions with the same spacing?

separate regions, and align regions are ok but not don't provide a nice spacing between two regions..

Can you provide an example, not sure what you mean.

Mike

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