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Who's right, VB or VFP?
Message
From
09/07/2002 05:44:28
 
 
To
08/07/2002 15:43:50
Cindy Winegarden
Duke University Medical Center
Durham, North Carolina, United States
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Forms & Form designer
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00676246
Message ID:
00676499
Views:
25
>From a math article I was able to find, "the slope computed as m = (y2 - y1) / (x2 - x1)." If you set the left-most part of the line at (0, 0) then a lower left to upper right line has a positive slope due to the fact that both the x and y values are increasing, where an upper right to lower left line has a negative slope (y goes from 0 to -something, while x increases). I'd say that a line with a positive slope goes "upward" and a line with a negative slope goes downward.

Don't forget that 0,0 is at the top left & the x-axis increases down the screen. This makes a positive slope go from upper left to lower right. So in terms of "upwards slope" relating to to a mathematically positive slope then VfP is wrong & VB is right. In purely visual terms, I agree with you, that upwards is the otherway round. It's a poor choice of words for the documentation.
Len Speed
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