On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 9:47 AM, Jack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > With Flash you copy using : command-c > you paste in the center of your doc using : command-v > you paste in place using : command-shift-v > I like the command-d under Pd to duplicate because it is easy to > align using shift-arrow keys. > ++
It sounds like these are pretty standard across Adobe's products, as these sound like all the keyboard command used in all their other graphics products... Mike > > > Jack > > > Le 1 sept. 08 à 13:17, Miller Puckette a écrit : > > > Another possibility would be to use command-shift-paste to paste > > and immediately > > go into the "stick" state. I think I might have to try a few > > different > > ways to see which is most natural. > > > > M > > > > On Mon, Sep 01, 2008 at 01:09:49PM +0200, Frank Barknecht wrote: > >> Hallo, > >> Miller Puckette hat gesagt: // Miller Puckette wrote: > >> > >>> Right, control-D should probably stay as it is, but separately > >>> copying and > >>> pasting migt want to do something "smarter". > >> > >> What about this idea/specification for a possible smart placement: > >> > >> 1) user presses Ctl-C and copies objects from coordinates (xc,yc) > >> > >> 2) user presses Ctl-V, mouse is at (xm, ym) > >> > >> 3) Objects get pasted at position: (xc, yc) - the original > >> coordinates - > >> but they don't get "anchored" yet. > >> > >> Now comes the new part: > >> > >> 4.1 a) If user moves the mouse now, the objects move to the mouse > >> coordinates (xm, ym) and they "stick" to the mouse from that point > >> on, > >> until the next click. > >> > >> 4.1 b) Alternatively one could enter the "sticky" phase only if > >> the user > >> clicks the mouse, i.e. as soon as the user after step 3) clicks > >> into the > >> canvas, the objects move to the mouse position and stay selected for > >> mouse movement until the button is released at which point the > >> objects > >> are anchored and possibly deselected. Deselecting could also > >> require a > >> second click. I like b) better than a): it contains less surprises. > >> > >> 4.2) This alternate path is taken, if the user doesn't use the > >> mouse, > >> but the cursor keys instead after step 3): The objects move > >> relative to > >> their new position at (xc, yc). They are still selected. Mouse > >> movements don't affect their position anymore, mouse clicks will > >> deselect the objects. That's basically the old, non-smart placement, > >> which has its uses, too. > >> > >>> THe current strategy for figuring out which object you clicked on > >>> is that, if > >>> more tan one object is selected, Pd prefers to drag an already- > >>> selected one; > >>> this is much better than whatever I had going before. > >> > >> Yes, that's good. > >> > >> Ciao > >> -- > >> Frank > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> [email protected] mailing list > >> UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/ > >> listinfo/pd-list > > > > _______________________________________________ > > [email protected] mailing list > > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/ > > listinfo/pd-list > > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list > -- Peace may sound simple—one beautiful word— but it requires everything we have, every quality, every strength, every dream, every high ideal. —Yehudi Menuhin (1916–1999), musician
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