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author | tpearson <tpearson@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2011-06-26 00:29:37 +0000 |
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committer | tpearson <tpearson@283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da> | 2011-06-26 00:29:37 +0000 |
commit | 2785103a6bd4de55bd26d79e34d0fdd4b329a73a (patch) | |
tree | c2738b1095bfdb263da27bc1391403d829522a14 /doc/krita/using-selections.docbook | |
parent | f008adb5a77e094eaf6abf3fc0f36958e66896a5 (diff) | |
download | koffice-2785103a6bd4de55bd26d79e34d0fdd4b329a73a.tar.gz koffice-2785103a6bd4de55bd26d79e34d0fdd4b329a73a.zip |
Remove krita* in preparation for name switch from Krita to Chalk
git-svn-id: svn://anonsvn.kde.org/home/kde/branches/trinity/applications/koffice@1238361 283d02a7-25f6-0310-bc7c-ecb5cbfe19da
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/krita/using-selections.docbook')
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diff --git a/doc/krita/using-selections.docbook b/doc/krita/using-selections.docbook deleted file mode 100644 index 5465b8a6..00000000 --- a/doc/krita/using-selections.docbook +++ /dev/null @@ -1,200 +0,0 @@ -<chapter id="selections"> -<title>Selections</title> - -<para> -This chapter gives a short introduction on selections. -</para><para> -You can select a part of an image masking off the rest. This is handy when -you want to cut, copy or just modify a part of the image without affecting -the rest. For processing selected objects &krita; applies a mask. Each pixel of -the selection is processed based on a value of its mask, or the <quote>level -of the selection</quote>, that can range from 0 (unselected) to 255 -(selected). Yes, that is right, you can have fractionally selected pixels. -And by working on individual pixels you can <quote>paint</quote> your selection. -</para><para> -The selection mask is visualized with unselected pixels having a blueish -tint, and selected pixels looking like normal. Fractionally selected pixels -are shown as something in between. Additionally a red border is drawn around -the selected areas. Fractionally selected pixels are inside the border, so -even inside the red border you can possibly see the blueish tint on some pixels. -</para> - -<sect1 id="selections-making"> -<title>Making a selection</title> -<para> -A whole range of tools exist to make selections. From rectangles, ellipses -and freehand to the more exotic like color range select. When you make -several selections they add up. So a rectangle select followed by an -ellipse select select both areas. Later on, you can subtract areas from -the selection by using, for example, the <guilabel>Erase Selection</guilabel> tool. -</para><para> -To get back to normal (no active selection), choose -<menuchoice><guimenu>Select</guimenu><guimenuitem>Deselect</guimenuitem> -</menuchoice>. To select all pixels, choose -<menuchoice><guimenu>Select</guimenu><guimenuitem>Select All</guimenuitem> -</menuchoice>. -</para><para> -You may think that those two actions give the same result, but it -is much more efficient to have no active selection than to have selected -everything. -</para><para> -After having deselected you can bring your selection back by choosing -<menuchoice><guimenu>Select</guimenu><guimenuitem>Reselect</guimenuitem> -</menuchoice>. -</para> -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-painting"> -<title>Painting your selection</title> -<para> -As said above you can essentially paint your selection, and just like -when you paint normally you can choose to paint your selection freehand or -guided with rectangles, ellipses, &etc;. You also have the choice of different -paint tools like pen, brush, airbrush, &etc;. Choose the guide tool, and the -paint tool in the toolbox, and go ahead and <quote>paint</quote> your -selection. -</para><para> -The guide tools work just like you may be used to from other applications. So -holding down shift while drawing a rectangle or an ellipse still forces them to -be a square or a circle respectively. -</para> - -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>Painting a selection</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-1.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>Painting a selection</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>Painting a selection</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>Painting a selection</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-2.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>Painting a selection</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>Painting a selection</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> - -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-unselecting"> -<title>Unselecting</title> -<para> -All the selection paint tools have an option to add or subtract from the -selection. This means that you can use all your familiar tools to both select -and unselect. There is also a true selection eraser among the selection paint -tools. -</para> - -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>Unselecting</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-3.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>Unselecting</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>Unselecting</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-making-new"> -<title>Making a new selection</title> -<para> -When you want to make a new selection, replacing the currently active one, you -first need to deselect the active selection. Choose -<menuchoice><guimenu>Select</guimenu><guimenuitem>Deselect</guimenuitem> -</menuchoice>. -</para> -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-contigious"> -<title>Selecting a contiguous area (magic wand)</title> -<para> -To follow the analogy of painting your selection &krita; also provides an -equivalent to filling a contiguous area. Some paint applications call this -selection tool the magic wand tool. What it does is select the nearby -pixels as long as they have nearly the same color as the pixel you click -on. The selection floods out from the point you click on. In the fuzziness -option you can set how different the colors are allowed to be before the -flooding stops. -</para> - -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>Before the magic wand</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-4.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>Before the magic wand</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>Before the magic wand</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> - -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>A magic wand selection</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-5.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>A magic wand selection</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>A magic wand selection</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> - -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-similar"> -<title>Selecting similar colors</title> -<para> -The <guilabel>Select Similar</guilabel> tool lets you pick a pixel and then select all pixels that -have a similar color. Picking a color in one corner of the image may select a -pixel in another corner if they have similar color. -With the <guilabel>Fuzziness</guilabel> option you can set how similar the colors must be to become -selected. -</para> - -<screenshot> -<screeninfo>Selecting similar colors</screeninfo> -<mediaobject> -<imageobject> -<imagedata fileref="using-selections-6.png" format="PNG" /> -</imageobject> -<textobject> -<phrase>Selecting similar colors</phrase> -</textobject> -<caption><para>Selecting similar colors</para></caption> -</mediaobject> -</screenshot> -</sect1> - -<sect1 id="selections-inverting"> -<title>Inverting the selection</title> -<para> -In some cases it is easier to specify your selection the other way around. That -is, first you select the parts that ultimately should not be selected and then -then you choose -<menuchoice><guimenu>Select</guimenu><guimenuitem>Invert</guimenuitem> -</menuchoice>. -What invert does, is that for every pixel it flips the selection level so to -speak, by setting it to 256 minus the current selection level. Thus what was -selected becomes unselected and vice versa. -</para> -</sect1> - -</chapter> |