Graphics °æ (¾«»ªÇø)
·¢ÐÅÈË: killest (victor), ÐÅÇø: Graphics
±ê Ìâ: PHOTOSHOP(16£©-Looking at the Work Area
·¢ÐÅÕ¾: ×Ï ¶¡ Ïã (Sat Mar 14 21:13:53 1998), תÐÅ
In Windows, click with the right mouse button.
Viewing images
The hand tool, the zoom tools, and the Zoom
commands let you view different areas of an image
at different magnifications. You can also use the
Navigator palette to control your view of an image,
and you can open additional windows to display
several views at once.
Controlling the window display
The window controls at the bottom of the toolbox
control how image windows in Adobe Photoshop
are displayed.
To change the display of image windows:
Click one of the following window controls: The left window control to
display the image in
a standard window, with a menu bar at the top and
scroll bars on the sides. This is the default mode. The center window
control to display the image
in a full-screen window with a menu bar but with
no title bar or scroll bars. To scroll through the
image, use the hand tool or the Navigator palette. The right window
control to display the image in
a full-screen window, but with no title bar, menu
bar, or scroll bars. To scroll through the image, use
the hand tool or the Navigator palette.
Opening multiple views of the same
image
Each image in Adobe Photoshop can have several
open windows showing different views. For exam-ple,
you might want to have multiple windows
open for a single image to view the image at differ-ent
zoom levels. The number of images and win-dows
you can have open depends on the amount
of memory you have available. A list of all open
windows appears at the bottom of the Window
menu.
To open additional windows:
Choose View > New View.
Arranging multiple windows
(Windows only)
In Windows, you can control how Adobe Photo-shop
displays multiple windows on-screen.
To arrange multiple windows:
Do one of the following: Choose Window > Cascade to display windows
stacked and cascading from the top left to the
bottom right of the screen.
Window controls
CHAPTER 2 28
Looking at the Work Area Choose Window > Tile to display windows edge
to edge.
Moving the view of a image
You can view different areas of an image using the
image window scroll bars or the hand tool.
To scroll with the hand tool:
1 Select the hand tool.
2 Drag in the image to move the image in its
window.
Drag the hand tool. . . to move the view.
To use the hand tool while another tool
is selected, hold down the spacebar as you
drag in the image.
Magnifying and reducing the view
The zoom tool and the Zoom commands let you
magnify and reduce the view of an image. You can
also zoom to an exact percentage of the original
view by entering values in the zoom percentage
box at the lower left of the window. The image
window’s title bar displays the magnification or
reduction percentage at all times. You can magnify
up to 1600% of the original image view.
Note: The 100% view of an image displays an image
based on the monitor resolution and the image reso-lution,
not on the actual image dimensions. See
“Pixel dimensions and monitor resolution” on
page 38 for more information.
To zoom in:
Do one of the following: Select the zoom tool, and click the area of the
image you want to magnify. Each click magnifies
the image to the next preset percentage, and the
magnified display is centered around the point you
click. When you reach the maximum magnifica-tion,
the center of the zoom tool appears empty. Choose View > Zoom In to
magnify to the next
preset percentage.
Click. . . to zoom in.
29
To zoom out:
Do one of the following: Select the zoom tool. Hold down Option
(Macintosh) or Alt (Windows) to activate the
zoom-out tool, and click the area of the image you
want to reduce. Each click reduces the view to the
previous preset percentage. Choose View > Zoom Out to reduce to the
previous preset percentage.
To magnify by dragging:
1 Select the zoom tool.
2 Drag over the part of the image you want to
magnify.
Drag the zoom tool. . . to magnify the view.
The part of the image enclosed by the zoom mar-quee
is displayed at the maximum magnification
possible.
Press Command+Option+ [=] (Macin-tosh)
or Ctrl+Alt+ [=] (Windows) to zoom in
to the maximum magnification. Press Com-mand+
Option+ [-]/Ctrl+Alt+ [-] to zoom
out to the minimum magnification.
To magnify or reduce to a specified percentage:
Enter a percentage value in the zoom percentage
box at the lower left of the window.
To display an image at 100%:
Do one of the following: Double-click the zoom tool. Choose View >
Actual Pixels. Click Actual Pixels in the Zoom Tool Options
palette.
Press Command+Option+0 (Macin-tosh)
or Ctrl+Alt+0 (Windows) to display the
image at 100%.
To change the view to fit the screen:
Do one of the following: Double-click the hand tool. Click Fit on
Screen in the Zoom Tool Options
palette.
These options scale the zoom percentage and win-dow
size to the largest that can fit on your monitor
and still contain the entire image.
To constrain the window size:
Deselect Resize Windows To Fit in the Zoom Tool
Options palette. Deselecting this option maintains
the same window size regardless of the image’s
magnification, and can be helpful when using
smaller monitors or when working with tiled
views of an image.
--
oo
il bb yy il ..... Óë¶ûͬÏûÍò¹Å³î
i bbb ll yyy i
iii bb yy iii
oo
¡ù À´Ô´:£®×Ï ¶¡ Ïã bbs.hit.edu.cn£®[FROM: victor.hit.edu.c]
Powered by KBS BBS 2.0 (http://dev.kcn.cn)
Ò³ÃæÖ´ÐÐʱ¼ä£º4.544ºÁÃë