Sunday, February 12, 2012

bottom to top formating

hi
i had luck formatering a text box top to botto in formatting:
t
e
s
t
i
n
g
but i would like bottom to top and i cant seem to find it
g
n
i
t
s
e
t
any ideas ?On Oct 5, 5:05 pm, "michael vardinghus" <xx> wrote:
> hi
> i had luck formatering a text box top to botto in formatting:
> t
> e
> s
> t
> i
> n
> g
> but i would like bottom to top and i cant seem to find it
> g
> n
> i
> t
> s
> e
> t
> any ideas ?
You might be able to use the StrReplace function (i.e., an expression
like):
=StrReplace(Fields!SomeField.Value)
If this doesn't work, you may need to create a single-column table
control and populate it from a dataset that is custom sorted before
getting to the report (in the stored procedure/query that sources the
report).
Hope this helps.
Regards,
Enrique Martinez
Sr. Software Consultant|||On Oct 7, 1:32 pm, EMartinez <emartinez...@.gmail.com> wrote:
> On Oct 5, 5:05 pm, "michael vardinghus" <xx> wrote:
>
> > hi
> > i had luck formatering a text box top to botto in formatting:
> > t
> > e
> > s
> > t
> > i
> > n
> > g
> > but i would like bottom to top and i cant seem to find it
> > g
> > n
> > i
> > t
> > s
> > e
> > t
> > any ideas ?
> You might be able to use the StrReplace function (i.e., an expression
> like):
> =StrReplace(Fields!SomeField.Value)
> If this doesn't work, you may need to create a single-column table
> control and populate it from a dataset that is custom sorted before
> getting to the report (in the stored procedure/query that sources the
> report).
> Hope this helps.
> Regards,
> Enrique Martinez
> Sr. Software Consultant
I think you might mean the StrRev() function. (String Reverse)
Because essentially, the formatting is correct, you just want the
letters to appear in reverse order.
- Jason|||On Oct 8, 12:32 pm, Jason <flaja...@.gmail.com> wrote:
> On Oct 7, 1:32 pm, EMartinez <emartinez...@.gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Oct 5, 5:05 pm, "michael vardinghus" <xx> wrote:
> > > hi
> > > i had luck formatering a text box top to botto in formatting:
> > > t
> > > e
> > > s
> > > t
> > > i
> > > n
> > > g
> > > but i would like bottom to top and i cant seem to find it
> > > g
> > > n
> > > i
> > > t
> > > s
> > > e
> > > t
> > > any ideas ?
> > You might be able to use the StrReplace function (i.e., an expression
> > like):
> > =StrReplace(Fields!SomeField.Value)
> > If this doesn't work, you may need to create a single-column table
> > control and populate it from a dataset that is custom sorted before
> > getting to the report (in the stored procedure/query that sources the
> > report).
> > Hope this helps.
> > Regards,
> > Enrique Martinez
> > Sr. Software Consultant
> I think you might mean the StrRev() function. (String Reverse)
> Because essentially, the formatting is correct, you just want the
> letters to appear in reverse order.
> - Jason
Whoops, sorry I got the function name wrong too. Must be contagious.
It is actually StrReverse
(strrev is correct for PHP, not VBScript. I deal with too many
languages)
Or if you want you can also reverse it in the SQL query if you don't
want to do an expression with the T-SQL REVERSE function.
- Jason|||On Oct 8, 11:36 am, Jason <flaja...@.gmail.com> wrote:
> On Oct 8, 12:32 pm, Jason <flaja...@.gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Oct 7, 1:32 pm, EMartinez <emartinez...@.gmail.com> wrote:
> > > On Oct 5, 5:05 pm, "michael vardinghus" <xx> wrote:
> > > > hi
> > > > i had luck formatering a text box top to botto in formatting:
> > > > t
> > > > e
> > > > s
> > > > t
> > > > i
> > > > n
> > > > g
> > > > but i would like bottom to top and i cant seem to find it
> > > > g
> > > > n
> > > > i
> > > > t
> > > > s
> > > > e
> > > > t
> > > > any ideas ?
> > > You might be able to use the StrReplace function (i.e., an expression
> > > like):
> > > =StrReplace(Fields!SomeField.Value)
> > > If this doesn't work, you may need to create a single-column table
> > > control and populate it from a dataset that is custom sorted before
> > > getting to the report (in the stored procedure/query that sources the
> > > report).
> > > Hope this helps.
> > > Regards,
> > > Enrique Martinez
> > > Sr. Software Consultant
> > I think you might mean the StrRev() function. (String Reverse)
> > Because essentially, the formatting is correct, you just want the
> > letters to appear in reverse order.
> > - Jason
> Whoops, sorry I got the function name wrong too. Must be contagious.
> It is actually StrReverse
> (strrev is correct for PHP, not VBScript. I deal with too many
> languages)
> Or if you want you can also reverse it in the SQL query if you don't
> want to do an expression with the T-SQL REVERSE function.
> - Jason
Oops, sorry about that, that's what I meant. Thanks for catching that
Jason.
Regards,
Enrique Martinez
Sr. Software Consultant

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