Coordinates unit in pt although default is cm in TikZDrawing simple 3D cylinders in TikZHow to make (1,1)...

Non-Cancer terminal illness that can affect young (age 10-13) girls?

Can I make estimated tax payments instead of withholding from my paycheck?

Is boss over stepping boundary/micromanaging?

Gear reduction on large turbofans

Coordinates unit in pt although default is cm in TikZ

Nested word series [humans only]

Intern applicant asking for compensation equivalent to that of permanent employee

A curious equality of integrals involving the prime counting function?

How can my powered armor quickly replace its ceramic plates?

What does it mean for a caliber to be flat shooting?

Does Skippy chunky peanut butter contain trans fat?

What would the chemical name be for C13H8Cl3NO

Can I write a book of my D&D game?

SET NOCOUNT Error in handling SQL call after upgrade

Has any human ever had the choice to leave Earth permanently?

Why is Agricola named as such?

Is there a weight limit to Feather Fall?

Quickly creating a sparse array

Graph with overlapping labels

How do you funnel food off a cutting board?

Making him into a bully (how to show mild violence)

Removing disk while game is suspended

Why would space fleets be aligned?

Why did the villain in the first Men in Black movie care about Earth's Cockroaches?



Coordinates unit in pt although default is cm in TikZ


Drawing simple 3D cylinders in TikZHow to make (1,1) mean (1cm,1cm) in TikZ? (Setting the units of coordinates)Rotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?Numerical conditional within tikz keys?TikZ/ERD: node (=Entity) label on the insideTikZ: Drawing an arc from an intersection to an intersectionDrawing rectilinear curves in Tikz, aka an Etch-a-Sketch drawingLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themBest practice for creating TikZ pictures with nested elementsBaseline in TikZ default unit of lengthDefault tikz-3dplot main coordinates













2















As we know that in TikZ, if unit is not mentioned in the coordinate in TikZ, it takes cm by default.



When I extract the coordinates, I was expecting the unit as cm. But TikZ shows the unit in the coordinate as pt.



How does TikZ determine the unit of measure in a coordinate if no unit is specified.



MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
begin{document}

newdimenXCoord
newdimenYCoord
newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
},
decorate
}] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
draw[thick,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
},
decorate
}] (a) -- (c);
draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
ExtractCoordinate{x};
node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {(XCoord,YCoord)};
end{tikzpicture}

end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

    – barbara beeton
    5 hours ago











  • Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

    – subham soni
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

    – marmot
    5 hours ago













  • How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

    – zyy
    5 hours ago











  • @zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

    – marmot
    5 hours ago
















2















As we know that in TikZ, if unit is not mentioned in the coordinate in TikZ, it takes cm by default.



When I extract the coordinates, I was expecting the unit as cm. But TikZ shows the unit in the coordinate as pt.



How does TikZ determine the unit of measure in a coordinate if no unit is specified.



MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
begin{document}

newdimenXCoord
newdimenYCoord
newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
},
decorate
}] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
draw[thick,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
},
decorate
}] (a) -- (c);
draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
ExtractCoordinate{x};
node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {(XCoord,YCoord)};
end{tikzpicture}

end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

    – barbara beeton
    5 hours ago











  • Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

    – subham soni
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

    – marmot
    5 hours ago













  • How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

    – zyy
    5 hours ago











  • @zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

    – marmot
    5 hours ago














2












2








2








As we know that in TikZ, if unit is not mentioned in the coordinate in TikZ, it takes cm by default.



When I extract the coordinates, I was expecting the unit as cm. But TikZ shows the unit in the coordinate as pt.



How does TikZ determine the unit of measure in a coordinate if no unit is specified.



MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
begin{document}

newdimenXCoord
newdimenYCoord
newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
},
decorate
}] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
draw[thick,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
},
decorate
}] (a) -- (c);
draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
ExtractCoordinate{x};
node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {(XCoord,YCoord)};
end{tikzpicture}

end{document}


enter image description here










share|improve this question














As we know that in TikZ, if unit is not mentioned in the coordinate in TikZ, it takes cm by default.



When I extract the coordinates, I was expecting the unit as cm. But TikZ shows the unit in the coordinate as pt.



How does TikZ determine the unit of measure in a coordinate if no unit is specified.



MWE:



documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
begin{document}

newdimenXCoord
newdimenYCoord
newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
},
decorate
}] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
draw[thick,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
},
decorate
}] (a) -- (c);
draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
ExtractCoordinate{x};
node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {(XCoord,YCoord)};
end{tikzpicture}

end{document}


enter image description here







tikz-pgf unit-of-measure






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 5 hours ago









subham sonisubham soni

4,00582981




4,00582981













  • Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

    – barbara beeton
    5 hours ago











  • Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

    – subham soni
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

    – marmot
    5 hours ago













  • How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

    – zyy
    5 hours ago











  • @zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

    – marmot
    5 hours ago



















  • Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

    – barbara beeton
    5 hours ago











  • Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

    – subham soni
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

    – marmot
    5 hours ago













  • How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

    – zyy
    5 hours ago











  • @zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

    – marmot
    5 hours ago

















Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

– barbara beeton
5 hours ago





Not an answer, but the information may be useful: tex.stackexchange.com/a/20069/579

– barbara beeton
5 hours ago













Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

– subham soni
5 hours ago





Barbara I would like to know the default unit of measure when unit of measure is not mentioned

– subham soni
5 hours ago




1




1





Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

– marmot
5 hours ago







Internally TikZ works with pt. You have a coordinate system in which the unit vectors have length 1cm. Does that make sense? The IMHO clearest discussion on this can be found at tex.stackexchange.com/a/31606/121799 .

– marmot
5 hours ago















How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

– zyy
5 hours ago





How did you measure the distance though? How did you make sure you are not magnifying the document when measuring?

– zyy
5 hours ago













@zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

– marmot
5 hours ago





@zyy As far as I can see, there is only the word singularity, not a real singularity, so you can use the Euclidean metric to a good approximation. ;-)

– marmot
5 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














You can always convert everything from pt to cm or back by multiplying by the ratio 1pt/1cm or its inverse. (If that's not what you're after, I will be happy to remove the post.)



documentclass{article}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
begin{document}

newdimenXCoord
newdimenYCoord
newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

begin{tikzpicture}
coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
},
decorate
}] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
draw[thick,postaction={
decoration={
markings,
mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
},
decorate
}] (a) -- (c);
draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
ExtractCoordinate{x};
node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {%
(pgfmathparse{XCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber{pgfmathresult},cm,%
pgfmathparse{YCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber[fixed,precision=2]{pgfmathresult},cm)};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}


enter image description here






share|improve this answer























    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "85"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: false,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: null,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f477075%2fcoordinates-unit-in-pt-although-default-is-cm-in-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    You can always convert everything from pt to cm or back by multiplying by the ratio 1pt/1cm or its inverse. (If that's not what you're after, I will be happy to remove the post.)



    documentclass{article}
    usepackage{tikz}
    usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
    usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
    usetikzlibrary{calc}
    usetikzlibrary{positioning}
    tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
    begin{document}

    newdimenXCoord
    newdimenYCoord
    newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

    begin{tikzpicture}
    coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
    coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
    coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
    draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
    decoration={
    markings,
    mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
    mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
    },
    decorate
    }] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

    draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
    draw[thick,postaction={
    decoration={
    markings,
    mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
    },
    decorate
    }] (a) -- (c);
    draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

    node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
    draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
    ExtractCoordinate{x};
    node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {%
    (pgfmathparse{XCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber{pgfmathresult},cm,%
    pgfmathparse{YCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber[fixed,precision=2]{pgfmathresult},cm)};
    end{tikzpicture}
    end{document}


    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      You can always convert everything from pt to cm or back by multiplying by the ratio 1pt/1cm or its inverse. (If that's not what you're after, I will be happy to remove the post.)



      documentclass{article}
      usepackage{tikz}
      usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
      usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
      usetikzlibrary{calc}
      usetikzlibrary{positioning}
      tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
      begin{document}

      newdimenXCoord
      newdimenYCoord
      newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

      begin{tikzpicture}
      coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
      coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
      coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
      draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
      decoration={
      markings,
      mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
      mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
      },
      decorate
      }] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

      draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
      draw[thick,postaction={
      decoration={
      markings,
      mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
      },
      decorate
      }] (a) -- (c);
      draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

      node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
      draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
      ExtractCoordinate{x};
      node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {%
      (pgfmathparse{XCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber{pgfmathresult},cm,%
      pgfmathparse{YCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber[fixed,precision=2]{pgfmathresult},cm)};
      end{tikzpicture}
      end{document}


      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        You can always convert everything from pt to cm or back by multiplying by the ratio 1pt/1cm or its inverse. (If that's not what you're after, I will be happy to remove the post.)



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{tikz}
        usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
        usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
        usetikzlibrary{calc}
        usetikzlibrary{positioning}
        tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
        begin{document}

        newdimenXCoord
        newdimenYCoord
        newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

        begin{tikzpicture}
        coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
        coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
        coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
        draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
        decoration={
        markings,
        mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
        mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
        },
        decorate
        }] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

        draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
        draw[thick,postaction={
        decoration={
        markings,
        mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
        },
        decorate
        }] (a) -- (c);
        draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

        node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
        draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
        ExtractCoordinate{x};
        node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {%
        (pgfmathparse{XCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber{pgfmathresult},cm,%
        pgfmathparse{YCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber[fixed,precision=2]{pgfmathresult},cm)};
        end{tikzpicture}
        end{document}


        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer













        You can always convert everything from pt to cm or back by multiplying by the ratio 1pt/1cm or its inverse. (If that's not what you're after, I will be happy to remove the post.)



        documentclass{article}
        usepackage{tikz}
        usetikzlibrary{decorations.pathmorphing}
        usetikzlibrary{decorations.markings}
        usetikzlibrary{calc}
        usetikzlibrary{positioning}
        tikzset{zigzag/.style={decorate,decoration=zigzag}}
        begin{document}

        newdimenXCoord
        newdimenYCoord
        newcommand*{ExtractCoordinate}[1]{path (#1); pgfgetlastxy{XCoord}{YCoord};}

        begin{tikzpicture}
        coordinate (c) at (0,-2);
        coordinate (d) at (4,-2);
        coordinate (e) at (2,-4);
        draw[thick,red,zigzag,postaction={
        decoration={
        markings,
        mark=at position 0.7 with { coordinate (x); },
        mark=at position 0.5 with { coordinate (singularity); },
        },
        decorate
        }] (-2,0) coordinate(a) -- (2,0) coordinate(b);

        draw[thick,fill=blue!20] (c) -- (b) -- (d) -- (e) -- cycle;
        draw[thick,postaction={
        decoration={
        markings,
        mark = at position 0.7 with coordinate (y);
        },
        decorate
        }] (a) -- (c);
        draw[thick,red,dashed] (x) -- (y);

        node[above = 10ex of singularity,red] (sn) {singularity};
        draw[red,->] (sn) -- ($(singularity)+(0,1)$);
        ExtractCoordinate{x};
        node[above] at (XCoord,YCoord) {%
        (pgfmathparse{XCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber{pgfmathresult},cm,%
        pgfmathparse{YCoord*1pt/1cm}pgfmathprintnumber[fixed,precision=2]{pgfmathresult},cm)};
        end{tikzpicture}
        end{document}


        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 4 hours ago









        marmotmarmot

        104k4123236




        104k4123236






























            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to TeX - LaTeX Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftex.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f477075%2fcoordinates-unit-in-pt-although-default-is-cm-in-tikz%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Couldn't open a raw socket. Error: Permission denied (13) (nmap)Is it possible to run networking commands...

            VNC viewer RFB protocol error: bad desktop size 0x0I Cannot Type the Key 'd' (lowercase) in VNC Viewer...

            Why not use the yoke to control yaw, as well as pitch and roll? Announcing the arrival of...