You are very welcome.
And thank you, for this opportunity to illustrate another important difference between analog and digital oscilloscopes. While there are several very good low-end DSOs on the market which tempt beginner scoposcopists, I still maintain that it is better to learn the basics on an analog scope. You should understand the relationship between scan rate, graticule markings and signal frequency in the time domain, and between displayed signal amplitude, channel input attenuation settings and graticule markers in the voltage domain, so that you can read frequencies and voltages from the screen display without depending on the (digital) scope's "numbers in boxes".
DSOs make it way too tempting to bypass this knowledge base. You can just press the "Auto" button and select some Measurements, and you don't even need to look at the waveform itself..... but you should do. One should always check the "numbers in boxes" against what the trace is _actually_ showing you, using the horizontal and vertical settings and the graticule markings.
Using an analog scope as one's first scope rather forces one to develop these skills from the very beginning. Then when one transitions to the DSO, one not only has a better appreciation for its "bells and whistles" but also one has the basic knowledge to avoid being fooled by what it is showing and telling you.