Hi,
j Mak [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've just installed the Gimp 2.3. Everything went
fine. Congratulation to the developers for this
polished release.
It is in no way polished. There are lots of unfinished things in this
early development snapshot.
I have a question though relating to
--- Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
j Mak [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I've just installed the Gimp 2.3. Everything went
fine. Congratulation to the developers for this
polished release.
It is in no way polished. There are lots of
unfinished things in this
early
I like the implementation of transient window
management system; it was a very good idea and works
very well on my gnome desktop.
else
In the change log I read “improved gradient editor”.
But I don't see any changes there.
What's new in the gradient editor?
jozsefmak
Hello all!
Is there a fast way to view all patterns a bit bigger then the iconic view in
the selection tools?
I would like to have a palette to view ca. 200x200 pixels big.
It would make it easier for me to choose the right one faster.
--
/Rikard
Sharing knowledge is the most
On Monday 16 May 2005 22:18, Rikard Johnels wrote:
Hello all!
Is there a fast way to view all patterns a bit bigger then the
iconic view in the selection tools?
I would like to have a palette to view ca. 200x200 pixels big.
It would make it easier for me to choose the right one faster.
The
j Mak wrote:
I like the implementation of transient window
management system; it was a very good idea and works
very well on my gnome desktop.
What is the transient window management system?
Peace...
Tom
___
Gimp-user mailing list
I have a handful of Gimp images that have 50+ layers.
With the move tool's 'Pick a layer or guide' selected, I can quickly
find where a particular layer is in the stack with a left click.
However, as soon as I let go of the mouse, I've lost where the layer is
as the selected layer switches back
On Monday 16 May 2005 22:32, Eric P wrote:
I have a handful of Gimp images that have 50+ layers.
With the move tool's 'Pick a layer or guide' selected, I can
quickly find where a particular layer is in the stack with a left
click. However, as soon as I let go of the mouse, I've lost where
--- Tom Williams [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
j Mak wrote:
I like the implementation of transient window
management system; it was a very good idea and
works
very well on my gnome desktop.
What is the transient window management system?
If you check Preferenceswindow