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Alfred

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Posts posted by Alfred

  1. Welcome to the Affinity Forums, arechsteiner. :)

     

    According to this video, holding down Ctrl when drawing a box with the move tool should change the selection behavior.

     

     

    That video was made for the Mac version, where the Cmd key is roughly equivalent to the Ctrl key on Windows. The Ctrl key on a Mac is an extra key for which we don't have a counterpart on our Windows keyboards.

     

    The Help says

    Pressing the right mouse button selects objects which are only partially covered by the selection marquee.*

    but I can't get that to work here (and I don't see a footnote to go with the asterisk in the text).

     

    @NeilP: The "select object when intersects with selection marquee" option is fine if you always want that behaviour, but whether you have the option switched on or off it should always be possible to override it with a modifier key, or via a right-click or a middle-click. (The latter is no use to me on this laptop, because the construction of the touchpad is such that I can't press the left and right buttons both at the same time.)

  2. I use noramlly the CTRL+Z to remove some of the previous actions and it works perfectly well.

    I sthere any way un-remove , i.e. to go back (i.e. with a kind of CTRL+Y)?

     

    In Affinity Designer, Ctrl+Y turns wireframe mode on or off. The default keyboard shortcut for 'Redo' (i.e. the reverse of 'Undo') is Ctrl+Shift+Z, but I generally find it easier to use the History panel as Ken has suggested.

     

    The shortcuts for 'Undo', 'Redo' and other editing operations are listed on the Edit menu.

  3. Welcome to the Affinity Forums, Unachili. :)

     

    When you say "selected", do you mean loaded (rather than installed)? How many fonts is "a lot"?

     

    I use High-Logic MainType rather than Xiles NexusFont, and the total number of fonts stored on this laptop is in four figures (with only a few hundred actually installed) but I haven't noticed any significant problems with the app slowing down or crashing when I select a font.

  4. Oddly, when I downloaded your file & converted its donuts to curves, the bounding box part worked fine, but changing the cap shapes to butt or square had no effect. I don't know if that is a bug in the MAS retail 1.5.1 version or some local problem with my copy of the app.

     

    I see the same here in the Windows beta 1.5.0 version. Initially when I exported to SVG the caps were butt or square (I'm not sure which) but I managed to fix that by changing the export options.

  5. The last two approaches are nice solutions. Could someone post a strategy to use a shape for the arcs so that one can style both stroke and fill. Does AD have a mechanism to convert a stroke (as done in the last method) into a shape? In Fireworks, there is a command called "Expand stroke" which will generate an outline of a stroke with both a fill and a stroke.

     

    Affinity Designer also has an 'Expand Stroke' command (which you'll find with the other conversion commands near the bottom of the Layers menu) but at the moment it creates wa-a-ay too many nodes. You'll get much a better result if you export to EPS and then open the EPS file.

     

    The EPS from my file has separate curves for the fill and the stroke of the circle. You might find it a little tidier to delete the circle that has a fill but no stroke, and then apply the fill directly to the remaining circle.

     

    Edit: Oops! My mistake. Exporting to EPS or SVG doesn't expand anything, of course, so you still have the problem of ending up with too many nodes if you use the 'Expand Stroke' command in AD. My workaround is to use 'Detach As New Object > Liine' in Serif DrawPlus, but Mac users will obviously need to find another app to do this.

  6. For a recent project I did something similar to what Alfred suggested, using one filled circle, 3 unfilled ones, & a pie shape. It required a Divide action, breaking some nodes, & deleting quite a few shapes, but the result is a very simple symbol consisting of one filled circle & 3 unfilled 3 node lines with adjustable line widths.

     

    With my 'pie and 3 donuts' technique, you don't need to divide, break nodes or delete anything. I started out with a unfilled ellipse which I duplicated; I then converted the duplicate to a donut via the button on the Context toolbar, set the start and end angles to 45° and 135° respectively, and enlarged and duplicated the result twice more to get the other two arcs. Finally, I converted the ellipse to a closed pie and gave it a black fill.

     

    The conversion of the ellipse to a pie was completely unnecessary, of course, but having creating those donuts I wanted to continue the foodie theme! :lol:

  7. Those are some very slick designs you've got there.

     

    Thanks, Brian! :)

     

    You must be pretty familiar with the snapping options. Looking at that last one, it must've been difficult. Imagine a labyrinth of a bunch of stair cases overlapping each other. Oh boy.

     

    Actually, the trickiest part was working out when to override snapping so that things went where I wanted them to go instead of where the program wanted to put them! ^_^

  8. I'm interested to see what features will come exclusive to Publisher that are not in Photo or Designer. I haven't used Photo, but I recall many of those features being in Designer.

     

    Linked text frames and multiple pages are the first and most obvious ones, along with linked (i.e. external rather than embedded) images. Then there are the things that go with multiple pages, such as dual master pages, facing pages, mirrored margins, pagination and running headers. I would also expect tables, calendars and a mail merge facility to be added at some point.

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