Although it may not be a ruler in your scope, per se, it can be used as a ruler quite easily. I pulled the below screenshot off the Leupold website and it shows what the subtensions are.
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Your scope has the TMOA reticle according to that link you sent. If you can measure the distance between your Point of Aim (POA) and Point of Impact (POI) with your reticle, you have a rough and dirty way to measure what your corrections will be provided all other variables are ruled out.
For example, the reticle below shows a green dot for the POA and a red dot for the POI. Looking at that, you can measure the distance (in MOA) from POA to POI and, from that, know your correction needs to be roughly U2.0 MOA, L2.0MOA. Instead of thinking in clicks and inches, read the markings on the elevation/windage turrets and make the corresponding corrections in MOA like
@Rob01 had mentioned, keep everything speaking the same language. The same applies for your situation between the 200yd shot with a 100yd zero. Anyway, I'm not sure if this provided any clarity but feel free to do with these ramblings as you see fit.
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