Floating canvas resize to fit on zoom?
Posted: 16 Oct 2009, 09:28
When you have a project window floating (i.e not fullscreen) is there anyway to have the window fit the canvas when you zoom in and out?
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i'm not sure if i understand your problem, but did you know that you can open a second window of the same project?KenC wrote:T...
When working with a bunch of reference images I'm constantly zooming in/out to check if my values are working and such ...
as mentioned by Ken, Modify Project... but don't forget to keep the "Resize" gadget cheched OFF,thearts wrote:... can i add more canvas to my current size ? or are those size fixed and i can't change it ?
yes indeed, the crop tool is perfect for adjusting the project dimensions during working on itZigOtto wrote:as mentioned by Ken, Modify Project... but don't forget to keep the "Resize" gadget cheched OFF,thearts wrote:... can i add more canvas to my current size ? or are those size fixed and i can't change it ?
or alternatively, you can use the Crop tool, the Cropped bounding box can be set outside the project boundaries,
by this way, the content of your project won't change, and you can extend your page exactly where you need, all in once,
(in your example, downward).
i see, i have no idea for a solution to this, although....maybe a feature like that one in OSX: where you have this button that spreads out all applications evenly over the screen (like playing cards) and you can click on the one you want and it comes to the front, full screen.KenC wrote:@Peter Yep I know I can do that. It's just that I sometimes have 10-15 reference images floating around. I tab to one of them and maybe zoom in to check something, but the window stays the same size so I have to resize it. Then I zoom back out so I can see the whole image more like a thumb, and then have to resize that window so it doesn't overlap anything.
That is a great panel! Thanks, Malc.malcooning wrote:...
If I understood your qualm correctly, give these 2 buttons try a. I use them all the time for reference images, and to inspect my drawings at smaller views.
What you need to get used to is to change window focus by clicking INSIDE the project window, not on the window title bar. If you get used to that, you'll be switching windows in one click. I don't like this behavior either, but it's not a bug really. I believe the idea behind it is that you would be able to shift project windows around your TVP-desktop (by dragging them by their title bars) without changing focus from the active project window.KenC wrote:Now if the bug where only the first window opened will zoom even if another window has the focus is fixed then I'm in business.
Not at the moment. But this has been requested quite sternly, so I believe soon this will be possible.Sewie wrote:Is it possible to keep the smaller window in front of the bigger window at all times ?
I see the usefullness in that, but when using larger brushes it's hard to not hit the canvas and accidentally stamp the brush, I keep my windows as "tight" as possible so there's very little outside canvas area to click on.malcooning wrote: What you need to get used to is to change window focus by clicking INSIDE the project window, not on the window title bar. If you get used to that, you'll be switching windows in one click. I don't like this behavior either, but it's not a bug really. I believe the idea behind it is that you would be able to shift project windows around your TVP-desktop (by dragging them by their title bars) without changing focus from the active project window.
You can also click on the canvas itself (you don't need to hunt for the rims). If you are focused on one window, and then just single-click on the canvas of another window, the brush is NOT being stamped, and the focus moves to that window. Anyway, this is how it works for me here. I tested it on a desktop with a Wacom intuos and a single-click on a 2nd window did not stamp the large brush I had loaded. It also works when I click+drag on an unfocused window.KenC wrote:I see the usefullness in that, but when using larger brushes it's hard to not hit the canvas and accidentally stamp the brush, I keep my windows as "tight" as possible so there's very little outside canvas area to click on.
I guess I can just get used to using TAB instead.