Jump to content
You must now use your email address to sign in [click for more info] ×

Ethernaut

Members
  • Posts

    6
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation Activity

  1. Like
    Ethernaut got a reaction from AllAppsUser in Reset Bounding Box   
    I ran into this problem recently, and would love a solution like a simple "reset" button!
     
    The problem with the boolean trick is that if the object is a geometric shape (like a rounded square, a cog, etc.) it would be converted to curves and lose its "procedural" editing features, wouldn't it?
     
    Cheers.
  2. Like
    Ethernaut reacted to Ben in Reset Bounding Box   
    This will be coming in the next Beta.  It will appear as a button on the context toolbar, but for ease of use it is also on the '.' key (full stop, no modifier) - I use this mostly as it's nice and quick.
     
    For multiple object selection it will reset the box to a uniform tight bounding box based on the selection contents.
     
    For single object selection it will do something special - it will toggle between the objects base box (the distorted box you see if an object has shear or rotation) and a uniform tight box.  If you have transformed your object so that the selection box is rotated or sheared it will always created a uniform box first (even if the current box began as a uniform box) - a second press will take you back to the objects base box.  Note, when you make a new selection with a single object it will still show the distorted base box first.
     
    I'm sure it will make sense when people play with it.  It works in the Move tool, Node tool and the Shape tools.
  3. Like
    Ethernaut reacted to Ben in Reset Bounding Box   
    Coming soon...
  4. Like
    Ethernaut got a reaction from paolo.limoncelli in Turn off antialiasing   
    Hello, new user here.
     
    I'm very happy with the purchase, but there's a little thing I'd like to ask in order to be able to ditch exporting to Photoshop completely.
     
    I intend to use AD mostly to generate 2D artwork in multiple resolutions*, and it's really important to control the amount of antialiasing. Without that, there's always a lengthy "pixel cleanup" stage that follows the creation of any asset.
     
    While being able to fine tune the antialias intensity would be amazing, I'd be happy with a simple "turn off antialiasing" option for both the pixel preview and the "rasterise"option.
     
    I originally thought that's what the "View quality" option in the preferences would do, but it seems to have no effect in the image. Bug, maybe?
     
    Thanks!
     
    * These are intended to be used in "pixel perfect" graphics (no scaling and no fractional coordinates, thus no filtering and maximum sharpness).
  5. Like
    Ethernaut got a reaction from ronnyb in Reset Bounding Box   
    I ran into this problem recently, and would love a solution like a simple "reset" button!
     
    The problem with the boolean trick is that if the object is a geometric shape (like a rounded square, a cog, etc.) it would be converted to curves and lose its "procedural" editing features, wouldn't it?
     
    Cheers.
  6. Like
    Ethernaut got a reaction from A_B_C in Turn off antialiasing   
    Hello, new user here.
     
    I'm very happy with the purchase, but there's a little thing I'd like to ask in order to be able to ditch exporting to Photoshop completely.
     
    I intend to use AD mostly to generate 2D artwork in multiple resolutions*, and it's really important to control the amount of antialiasing. Without that, there's always a lengthy "pixel cleanup" stage that follows the creation of any asset.
     
    While being able to fine tune the antialias intensity would be amazing, I'd be happy with a simple "turn off antialiasing" option for both the pixel preview and the "rasterise"option.
     
    I originally thought that's what the "View quality" option in the preferences would do, but it seems to have no effect in the image. Bug, maybe?
     
    Thanks!
     
    * These are intended to be used in "pixel perfect" graphics (no scaling and no fractional coordinates, thus no filtering and maximum sharpness).
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Guidelines | We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.