How does one go about requesting this as a feature enhancement?
To include this in Gimp would vastly improve usability in this regard,
as well as making logical (and practical) sense.
On 26/01/2011 12:14, Jeremy Nell wrote:
Except that the opacity slider makes it tougher to see the preview
Øyvind have already answered your question:
It indeed is, and this should eventually solve itself as GEGL is more
properly integrated with the layer stack of GIMP and what is shown is
no longer a preview but the actual result. For now the preview is a
hack that provides better visual feedback
I must have missed that response.
Thanks. Looking forward to the new release!
On 28/01/2011 11:09, Tőkés Ábel wrote:
Øyvind have already answered your question:
It indeed is, and this should eventually solve itself as GEGL is more
properly integrated with the layer stack of GIMP and what is
Not sure about GEGL previews, bu there is a new transform tool spec:
http://gui.gimp.org/index.php/Transformation_tool_specification
To combine scale, shear and rotate into one tool. No mention of how
previews are to be handled, however.
-Rob A
On Fri, Jan 28, 2011 at 4:16 AM, Jeremy Nell
The more I work in Gimp, the more I realise that this is something that
needs to be looked at by the developers, as it is not very intuitive.
Again, I've found how the focus of the image being rotated / scaled
interferes with the rest of the working area. For example, if I set a
particular
I don't have a solution, but would like to second this - it is really
counter productive. The layer should indeed stay where it is and do not
change settings like opacity, etc.
Peter
On 01/26/2011 10:22 AM, Jeremy Nell wrote:
The more I work in Gimp, the more I realise that this is something
Rotating and scaling a layer should not affect the opacity and layer
positioning, logically.
On 26/01/2011 11:28, peter kostov wrote:
I don't have a solution, but would like to second this - it is really
counter productive. The layer should indeed stay where it is and do not
change settings
On 01/26/2011 09:22 AM, Jeremy Nell wrote:
The more I work in Gimp, the more I realise that this is something
that needs to be looked at by the developers, as it is not very intuitive.
Again, I've found how the focus of the image being rotated / scaled
interferes with the rest of the working
Except that the opacity slider makes it tougher to see the preview as
the opacity is made less.
But that's besides the point.
1. If I've set the opacity of the layer, then the opacity of that layer
should remain as is when I scale / rotate.
2. When I scale / rotate, the layer's position in
On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 10:14 AM, Jeremy Nell jeremyn...@gmail.com wrote:
But that's besides the point.
1. If I've set the opacity of the layer, then the opacity of that layer
should remain as is when I scale / rotate.
2. When I scale / rotate, the layer's position in the stack should
1. I have an illustration with a few layers (lines and colours).
2. I drag and drop, let's say, an image of a TV onto the illustration.
3. I move the TV's layer down to below all the layers, so that it's at
the bottom and appears partly behind, say, a cabinet.
4. I want to scale and rotate it
The rotate tool have an opacity slider for the preview in the tool
options dialog.
El 21/01/11 11:16, Jeremy Nell escribió:
1. I have an illustration with a few layers (lines and colours).
2. I drag and drop, let's say, an image of a TV onto the illustration.
3. I move the TV's layer down
Thanks. That does help, but not completely, because the more you lessen
the opacity, the less of the preview you can see. It still appears on
top of all the layers, rather than in the layer where it was originally
positioned (in this case, at the bottom).
On 21/01/2011 12:20, Mikel Garai
13 matches
Mail list logo