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Posts posted by AndRo Marian
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Can you send this to developers, is not that hard to fix it.
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Just select what type you want for that. I would like HEX because is the usual one for my to copy and paste no matter on what type of color I am.
Select to be the RGB like 123,123,123 if you are on RGB, same for HSL, or what type you want for all.
Or 2 input, one for usual you prefer and one for that type.I like to use the HSL, but I want to copy/pase the HEX or maybe RGB and I can't on some situations.
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Show the HEX input box on all tabs with RGB, HSL, etc.
Not only on RGB Hex. And move it up. Is enough empty space.
Add the text left padding and fix the resizing when focused.
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A way to disable the origin points for Artboard would be good I think. Or a way to not remember the Origins, to reset it to default value or to be per object. And that White dot should be Grayed and to make the actual selected origin White. Because I don't see the point of being white if is not selected anymore, the selected one is still Gray and a litter bigger, but hard to notice it because of the White one.
And I notice that selected dot is not scaled to perfect pixel dimensions, is a little blurry on edges. -
Confusing others with what? How should I think the Guide Manager to work?
Illustrator doesn't have a Guide Manager. Just drag a line from the Top ruler into the plane and use the Transform Tool to more it on Y, Height.
On the Designer I need to open Guide Manager and look for the Horizontal lines to move them Vertically.
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8 hours ago, Old Bruce said:
Horizontal is from Horizon. That is not a thing that is vertical. I want a Horizontal guide because I am going to be drawing something on the horizon.
Width/Height are distances. Width can run from left to right, North to South, near to far, and even up and down.
Width and Height are the Size. Distance is the interval of the 2 points measurement on a object. Like from Top (Vertical) to (20cm on Vertical) that you end to make a Horizontal line starting from Left to Right on (Horizontal)...
8 hours ago, R C-R said:Vertical is neither the opposite of height nor equal to it. Vertical refers to an orientation; height to a linear measurement. Likewise for horizontal & width; neither is the opposite of nor equal to the other. They are different things.
Vertical is the Y, Height. Horizontal is X,Width. That I say and example on other post.
8 hours ago, R C-R said:"Horizontal" means parallel to the plane of the horizon. "Vertical" means perpendicular to the plane of the horizon. To determine how far above or below the plane of the horizon something is, you measure its height (its vertical displacement) from the plane of the horizon. To determine how far it is vertically from some other object you measure the width (the horizontal displacement) between them.
That's correctly. But you would draw a Horizontal Line between 2 points to measure it's Y,Height (Vertical).
I don't really get the "To determine how far it is vertically from some other object you measure the width (the horizontal displacement) between them. ", even if I translated it...
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For me is pretty weird that the Vertical is opposite of Height, Horizontal opposite to Width.
Vertical = Height, Horizontal = Width. I can't think every time to the opposite of to them.
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29 minutes ago, firstdefence said:
But you are talking about two different things, rulers and guides, rulers aren't guides, it's a measuring tool whether that be between two points or to mark individual points, that's why the marks on a ruler are vertical when placed in a horizontal position, so you know where to mark for a vertical guide, a vertical guide is just that a guide that is vertical. A ruler or tape is an aid to placement of a guide line.
What you want is a vertically moving guide, or a horizontally moving guide.Already say that previously.
Some people already get it.What hard is to understand this:
1. I have a 200x400 wood.
2. I want to cut in half Vertically (400 Height), so I need to measure Vertically and draw a Horizontal Guide under the ruler.
3. Going to Guide Manager -> Vertical -> New 200. Now there should add a Horizontal Line (not Vertical) at the Y axes of the Vertical.In that case the Vertical would be the document Heignt and the Horizontal document Width.
In current perception: The Vertical is the document Width and the Horizontal document Height.
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14 minutes ago, firstdefence said:
You may use the ruler but you draw a vertical guide line, you then get a square or some such and draw a vertical line, using the tape isn't the guide it's the tool for measuring where the guide will be placed, just like the rulers are on the workspace, the small mini vertical mark is drawn to enable the precise placement of a vertical guide.
😆
You say already what I say previously! What you want to show here?
You draw the Vertical guide because the ruler is Horizontal.
So, when you measure Vertical you put horizontal guide. When measuring Horizontal, you put Vertical line.
When you are thinking to measure Vertically, you already know there are Horizontal Lines...But in the Guide Manager, when you thinking to Vertical measurement, there are to Horizontal Guides and not Vertical...
And I say again, this is not how the Guides, Lines are oriented on screen. Is just the Guide Manager perception and thinking on a real ruler conception and working.
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5 minutes ago, Alfred said:
If we had Horizontal Alignment Guides it would be entirely reasonable to expect them to facilitate horizontal alignment; likewise, if we had Vertical Alignment Guides it would be entirely reasonable to expect them to facilitate vertical alignment. But we don’t have those: what we have are Horizontal Guides and Vertical Guides, with the name in each case describing (as most of us expect) the orientation rather than the purpose of the guide.
Would be a good thing if that would be added for the purpose and not the lines orientation.
Because the Horizontal lines dividing the Vertical measuring. -
Even a video here:
I mean when you are measuring Vertically, you end with a doing a Horizontal line in front of the number or below the ruler.
In this video the perspective is Horizontally, so the Guide will be Vertically, from right to left.
So, get a ruler (You want to measure the 10 cm from top), Put the ruler Vertically and draw a Horizontal line under Ruler or on front of the indicator of 10 cm.
That's what I expected to see on the Guide Manager, Going to Vertical, add a guide that should be Horizontally from Top to Bottom.Like how @GarryP says above. My perspective is not how the Guides (Lines) are oriented.
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19 minutes ago, h_d said:
In the real world I use a real-life steel ruler to measure the vertical distance on my real-life piece of wood. I make a mark on the wood, at the position I want to cut. I then extend that mark perpendicularly to the mark using a real-life wood and steel try square.
The extension of the mark from one dimension to two, as drawn by the try square, is my cutting guide. It is perpendicular to the orientation of the ruler - in other words it is horizontal, and of itself it is not a measurement. The try square does not measure, it guides.
In Affinity Photo, I do exactly the same thing.
I use the virtual ruler to measure the vertical distance along my computer image. I position a guide perpendicular to the measurement - this is my virtual try square.
The two-dimensional extension of the guide from a one-dimensional point on the vertical ruler is perpendicular to the orientation of the ruler - in other words it is horizontal, and of itself it is not a measurement. The guides do not measure, they guide.
Real world steel ruler = Affinity ruler > it measures
Real world try square = Affinity guide > it is perpendicular to ruler, it does not measure.
You are going way too much out of this subject that I debating here. I think you still not understand what this is about. It's about Guide Manager and how that works.
I expected to put a Ruler on the screen to measure Vertically, Going to Guide Manager, to Vertical and that should create a Horizontal line (Like in the Paper video, a Horizontal line).
What you don't understand?Edit:
Other thing. You are moving the Horizontal guides up and down. So that is Vertically too.
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3 minutes ago, h_d said:
Whichever way you cut it you are wrong. The ruler are not invisible.
By default, they measure from the top left-hand corner of the document. You can drag them to any position you like.
If you cannot see them, you can make them visible by going to View>Show Rulers.
Now, if the ruler runs vertically, then the guide that runs out from it is horizontal.
I think you miss some comments that makes a difference from Software Ruler and the Real Life ruler practice and the Guide Manager.
Already I say when Dragging from the Software ruler, from Top to Bottom makes a Guide like in realy life ruler with Horizontal Marks (Guides).
Just is not the same for the Guide Manager, Horizontal is Horizontal and Vertical is Vertical, is not like you measure Vertical with a ruler in Real Life and you put Horizontal guides. -
Yea. But in this case the ruler is invisible. So you go to measure Vertically to put a Horizontal guide...
Maybe I think too much on how on the paper I do. And I expect to be something the same on Guide Manager.
Anyway, dragging from Rulers works as expected. -
7 minutes ago, R C-R said:
It may make more sense to you if you think of the ruler as the guide: as in your video you position the ruler vertically to make your (more or less) horizontal mark.
But the ruler is not a guide (Even if you put the marks, is not anymore), is a tool that you measure the distance. The Horizontal marks are the guides to know where to cut or how.
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5 minutes ago, R C-R said:
??? In the real world, if I want to measure the distance from the top to the bottom of something, I position my ruler or tape measure vertically, from the top to the bottom of the object.
And draw a horizontal line to the start and to the end. Not Vertical. Or you put a dot on some cases.
Not you understand what I mean? -
Just now, R C-R said:
I am not sure what you mean by that. Guides have no width or height of their own.
It is completely logical: they are positioned not by width or height but by distance from an edge, a vertical edge for vertical guides & a horizontal edge for horizontal ones.
I am refering that you put a Horizontal guide but you use the document Height to find the center. Same for the Vertical, you use the Width.
Even in reality. If you want to measure a distance from Top to Bottom you will drag a Horizontal line, not Vertical.
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2 minutes ago, R C-R said:
Vertical guides run vertically (top to bottom) & horizontal ones run horizontally (left to right). That is what your video shows. It is the expected behavior.
But not the logic behavior. There you use Height for Horizontal and Width for Vertical 😕
No way to inverse how should be to me? Horizontal = Width, Vertical = Height -
Windows, 1.9.2. Are you sure is that guide for the Vertical indicator and not Horizontal? For my is Vertical for Horizontal.
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When I create guides and I go to create a Vertical guide, yes vertical. Is created a Horizontal guide.
Make sense or I am the only one that finds this really weird?
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10 hours ago, MEB said:
Hi @AndRo Marian
I've reproduced this here both on Windows and macOS. It is indeed a different issue. I will get this logged to be looked at. Thanks for your feedback/support.Thanks you.
10 hours ago, loukash said:I wonder what am I doing "wrong" that I can't reproduce it…? :D
No idea. Seams pretty weird. But not working on many things. If you just drag the mouse and cut it, works good. But if you change manually the values from Transform panel, appear extra empty pixels around it.
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14 minutes ago, loukash said:
Already one person says he can reproduce on Windows and one can't on Mac.
Seams to be only for Windows thing.Not sure who moved it to Questions but I am pretty sure I posted it to Designer Bugs on Windows...
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3 minutes ago, loukash said:
From your video I can see that you have enabled "Move By Whole Pixels", but not "Force Pixel Alignment".
It needs to be vice versa.Already I say I have it and is the same result...
Anyway, Doesn't matter if the Transform Tab show perfect rounded value.





Crash when resizing an rectangle isinde a compound
in V1 Bugs found on Windows
Posted
Crash with Rounded Rectangle, Cloud Tool, Callout Elipse Tool, Tear Tool