<title> xiph.org: MGM manual </title> <STYLE> <!-- BODY {font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica; font-size: 12pt; background-color: #ffffff} --> </STYLE> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" link="#208b8b" vlink="#000080"> <p align=center><img src="mgm-small.gif"><br> [ <a href="index.html">home</a> | <a href="faq.html">FAQ</a> | <a href="down.html">download</a> | <a href="trouble.html">troubleshooting</a> | <a href="docs.html">manual</a> | <a href="http://www.xiph.org/cvs.html">cvs</a> | <a href="mail.html">mailing lists</a> ]<p> <hr> <h1>Resource: scalejustify</h1> <h2>applicability</h2> Toplevel, Module class or instance <h2>possible settings</h2> (top/right) -1<=<em>n</em><=1 (bottom/left)<br> (default varies my module, global default is 1)<p> <h2>description</h2> 'scalejustify' specifies whether modules that take up less than their alloted space are justified against the main window bottom (for horizontal stacking) or left hand side (for vertical stacking) using a value of 1, are centered with a value of zero or top/right justified with a value of -1. Intermediate values are allowed.<p> When stacked horizontally, a module is given only as much space as it will fill in the x direction, but it may not fill it's alloted space in the y direction due to a <a href=r-scalelenadj.html>scalelenadj</a> (vertical graph) or <a href=r-scalewidadj.html>scalewidadj</a> (horizontal graph) setting less than 100%. The analagous case is true when stacked vertically. The justification decides where the module will float in the extra space. <h2>see also</h2> <a href=r-geometry.html>geometry</a> <a href=r-scalelenadj.html>scalelenadj</a> <a href=r-scalewidadj.html>scalewidadj</a> <p> <hr> <a href="http://www.xiph.org/"> <img src="white-xifish.gif" align=left border=0> </a> <p> <font size=-2 color=#505050> MGM will not get your whites whiter or your colors brighter. It will, however, sit there and look spiffy while sucking down a major honking wad of RAM.<p> MGM, Xiphophorus and their logos are trademarks (tm) of <a href="http://www.xiph.org/">Xiphophorus</a>. These pages are copyright (C) 1994-1999 Xiphophorus. All rights reserved.<p> </body>