A note about configuring the shape of "wide aspect ratio" characters to fit around a clock-face. The work described was in PPX9.
I noticed a problem when I generated the disk object I posted earlier. My purpose was to show the set of glyphs in William's poem disposed around the edge of a disk. Placing them wasn't my problem, although account should be taken of the various subsequent posts on that topic.
My problem, which I didn't solve, was my desire to have the glyphs conform to the circular path. That means, individual glyphs, which are rather wider than a single normal text character should themselves curve to fit the path.
The problem originated in that the glyphs I copied were those in William's picture, and were within a graphic. I copied them using a screen copying app, and was thus holding a vertical rectangle with the glyphs stacked vertically.
Now, it was easy to crop each glyph from the stack, and then I tried to curve each glyph using the distorting tool. This where to snag showed up. Trying to distort just one glyph (remember, one cropped from several) brought up the whole original stack. That might have been OK, if I could have re-cropped each glyph. But they were too close together to separate.
So my comment is that if you try to distort a cropped image, the crop is removed.
I have not investigated any further so far, and I would be grateful if anyone could suggest a remedy. I may just have ignored a simple process in PPX9.
If I had started with a set of individual glyphs (not linked in a graphic) I believe I should not have had a problem. This note is not about how to get such a set, but to bring to mind the interesting crop/distort effect.