The delta length of cable between each antenna is a simple formula;
[(Distance between antennas) * sin(beam tilt angle)] / 1.45.
Where
beam tilt angle is the angel from straight out (broadside or boresight).
The 1.45 item is the square root of Teflon dielectric used in most cable. (Teflon dielectric is about 2.1).
There is no frequency in the requirement, this applies for all frequencies, which is really nice.
Here's an example: Four antennas spaced 5 feet apart which makes a 15 foot wide antenna, scanned to angle of 30 degrees off broadside. Use a 4 way power divider and have the length of each successive antenna be different by;
5 feet * sin(30) / 1.45= 5 * 0.5 / 1.45=1.72 feet.
Placing the power divider in the middle of the array of 4 antennas, and you picked a 10 foot cable to the first antenna, the second antenna would have 11.72 feet of cable, the third antenna has 13.44 feet of cable and the 4th antenna has 15.16 feet of cable.
The antenna beam points to the side with the longest cable.
With antenna spacing of half wavelength, you can make your beam scan to very wide angles.
Caution: If you increase your spacing of the antennas beyond one half wavelength (0.5*11.8/fghz inches)and try to scan to wide angles, a second beam pops up in the opposite direction and you have two beams. The inadvertent one is called a "grating lobe". This calculation is all just physical lengths. So if you draw a picture of all the antennas sending energy to 30 degrees off broadside, you simply make the electrical length of the cable (not the physical length) plus airwave lengths add up to be equal for all four antennas in the 30 degree direction. It's just that easy.
kch