Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
I've just reverted to 2.2

2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final straw.

TW


On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 07:42:29 -, Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi,

 On Wed, 2007-12-19 at 21:18 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:

 It's not a problem either with window managers nor Linux - the  
 alt-mouse
 behaviour is standard and well established; it's a problem with the Gimp
 (assuming it can't be changed).

 Applications such as GIMP used to use this modifier key long before some
 window managers started to grab it for their purpose.

  How do I tell Gimp to use another shift-type key for that action?

 It usually helps to press Shift together with Alt if you want the Alt
 key to end up being seen by the application.

 Anyway, there is no action in GIMP that absolutely requires use of the
 Alt modifier. So if you can't change your window manager key-bindings
 and Shift-Alt doesn't work, you should still be able to use all
 functionality.


 Sven




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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Robert Smits
On December 19, 2007 01:10:11 pm Daniel Hornung wrote:
 On Wednesday 19 December 2007, Thomas Worthington wrote:
  Is there any way to restore the Alt key to its old usage in 2.4? I can't
  drag selections anymore because it requires Alt and mouse at the same
  time, which is a problem on Linux.

 It's a problem in some (most?) window managers, not with Linux itself.
 Personally, my preferred option is to change the WM's behaviour to move
 windows with the windows key + mouse instead of Alt + mouse.

Windows key? What is this mythical key? It is certainly not evident on any of 
my keyboards.

-- 
Bob Smits [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Television is an invention that permits you to be entertained in your 
living room by people you wouldn't have in your home...David Frost
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread JC Dill
Thomas Worthington wrote:
 I've just reverted to 2.2
 
 2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final straw.

I've been lurking on this list for several years.  I'd LOVE to be able 
to use Gimp instead of paying the ever increasing price of Photoshop. 
But Gimp is NOT a suitable replacement for Photoshop for most image 
editing professionals and this alt-key problem highlights why.  Gimp 
programmers make capricious changes in the software with total disregard 
for their user community.  They expect that all users are programmers, 
that they can work around bad design decisions, handle bad UI decisions, 
deal with poor documentation, write their own patches, etc.

Gimp will never come into general use until these issues are fixed. 
Firefox is a true competitor to IE because the Firefox development team 
understands these issues and built a product that average computer 
users can easily use.  The Gimp development team should give this 
serious consideration.  It doesn't take a lot of work to fix Gimp - it 
just requires a small change in focus - design the program for 
non-programmers to USE, don't make capricious changes, don't BREAK 
things when you introduce new versions.

Back to lurking...

jc - professional photographer, Photoshop user since v4.0, currently 
using CS3.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Olivier Lecarme
JC Dill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Thomas Worthington wrote:
  I've just reverted to 2.2
  
  2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final straw.
 
 I've been lurking on this list for several years.  I'd LOVE to be able 
 to use Gimp instead of paying the ever increasing price of Photoshop. 
 But Gimp is NOT a suitable replacement for Photoshop for most image 
 editing professionals and this alt-key problem highlights why.  Gimp 
 programmers make capricious changes in the software with total disregard 
 for their user community.  They expect that all users are programmers, 
 that they can work around bad design decisions, handle bad UI decisions, 
 deal with poor documentation, write their own patches, etc.
 
 Gimp will never come into general use until these issues are fixed. 
 Firefox is a true competitor to IE because the Firefox development team 
 understands these issues and built a product that average computer 
 users can easily use.  The Gimp development team should give this 
 serious consideration.  It doesn't take a lot of work to fix Gimp - it 
 just requires a small change in focus - design the program for 
 non-programmers to USE, don't make capricious changes, don't BREAK 
 things when you introduce new versions.

I generally remain silent in front of so strong statements, but this one
is too typical. 

Could you be only a little specific about these capricious changes?
And what is this alt-key problem? From the beginning of GIMP, the alt
key has been used for some specific uses, for example in the layer mask.
From the beginning of GIMP, it has been suggested, when the window
manager confiscated this key for its own use, to use Shift+Alt instead,
or to change one's window manager. Does it really need to be a
programmer to understand that, or to change the window manager
parameters in order to free the alt key?

Note that such comments always come from people calling them
true professionals, as if anybody else would be simple and stupid
amateurs...

-- 


   Olivier Lecarme, obviously a dumb amateur
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 14:46 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:
 I've just reverted to 2.2
 
 2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final straw.

Sorry, but if there are problems with 2.4, then we would like to hear
about them. So far the feedback has been very positive. And nothing
really changed with regard to the Alt key, compared to 2.2. So what
exactly are you talking about?


Sven


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[Gimp-user] Palettes Pop Menu Missing Options in Gimp 2.4.2

2007-12-20 Thread D.Jones (aka) Capnhud
According the the Gimp documentation you can sort a palette. How do you do 
this? Because
when I right click a palette the options 9-12 are missing on a palette that I 
created 

In the palette pop menu you should have 
1.edit palette' 
2.new palette 
3.import palette 
4.duplicate palette 
5.merge palette (this is not yet implemented) 
6.copy palette location 
7.delete palette 
8.refresh palettes 
9.offset palettes 
10.palette to gradient 
11.palette to repeating gradient 
12.sort palette

I only have 1-8 in the pop menu using windows Xp gimp 2.4.2


  

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Re: [Gimp-user] Palettes Pop Menu Missing Options in Gimp 2.4.2

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 10:19 -0800, D.Jones (aka) Capnhud wrote:
 According the the Gimp documentation you can sort a palette. How do you do 
 this? Because
 when I right click a palette the options 9-12 are missing on a palette that I 
 created 

Looks like you don't have Python on your computer then. The palette
manipulation you are looking for is implemented by Python plug-ins.
Since GIMP 2.4, the Python binding is the recommended scripting language
for GIMP and we expect that more and more functionality will be
implemented using Python.


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 17:29:12 -, Olivier Lecarme  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Could you be only a little specific about these capricious changes?
 And what is this alt-key problem? From the beginning of GIMP, the alt
 key has been used for some specific uses, for example in the layer mask.

I'm not aware of any interaction with the layer mask which requires Alt  
and mouse movement (only click, which isn't a problem). Moving a selected  
region is a very common action and now seems impossible under normal Linux  
user interfaces. I can see the application of capricious to that  
situation. What was the benefit of changing the default drag action?

 From the beginning of GIMP, it has been suggested, when the window
 manager confiscated this key for its own use, to use Shift+Alt instead,

Shift-Alt does not seem to work with the dragging motion, for me anyway.

 or to change one's window manager. Does it really need to be a
 programmer to understand that, or to change the window manager
 parameters in order to free the alt key?

Suggesting that a system-wide setting should be changed to accomodate one  
application's arbitary decision that all users must use Alt instead of any  
number of other spare keys that keyboards have (AltGr, Windows, Menus,  
Meta, whatever) when it is well known that Alt-drag is used by desktops is  
perverse and lazy.

The problem seems to be with GTK rather than Gimp, to be fair. But it  
would have been nice if Gimp allowed it to be worked around. If it was the  
only problem with 2.4 I would do something about it myself by way of a  
patch, but it isn't and I've just personally had enough with 2.4. It  
offers very little new for a lot of hassle with functions that used to  
work fine.

TW


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Olivier Lecarme
Thomas Worthington [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 17:29:12 -, Olivier Lecarme
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Could you be only a little specific about these capricious changes?
  And what is this alt-key problem? From the beginning of GIMP, the alt
  key has been used for some specific uses, for example in the layer mask.
 
 I'm not aware of any interaction with the layer mask which requires
 Alt  and mouse movement (only click, which isn't a problem). Moving a
 selected  region is a very common action and now seems impossible
 under normal Linux  user interfaces. I can see the application of
 capricious to that  situation. What was the benefit of changing the
 default drag action?

I don't think I'm using an abnormal Linux user interface : Debian Sid
with Gnome. I asked the window manager (Metacity) to use the windows key
for dragging a window, and all works perfectly. I imagined that you were
using Windows, which of course cannot be parameterized.

  From the beginning of GIMP, it has been suggested, when the window
  manager confiscated this key for its own use, to use Shift+Alt instead,
 
 Shift-Alt does not seem to work with the dragging motion, for me anyway.
 
  or to change one's window manager. Does it really need to be a
  programmer to understand that, or to change the window manager
  parameters in order to free the alt key?
 
 Suggesting that a system-wide setting should be changed to accomodate
 one  application's arbitary decision that all users must use Alt
 instead of any  number of other spare keys that keyboards have (AltGr,
 Windows, Menus,  Meta, whatever) when it is well known that Alt-drag
 is used by desktops is  perverse and lazy.

Whatever be the key choosed, it will be also be the choice for another
application or component. And the decision from this application will
seem arbitrary to others.

 The problem seems to be with GTK rather than Gimp, to be fair. But it
 would have been nice if Gimp allowed it to be worked around. If it was
 the  only problem with 2.4 I would do something about it myself by way
 of a  patch, but it isn't and I've just personally had enough with
 2.4. It  offers very little new for a lot of hassle with functions
 that used to  work fine.

Once again, you are making non-specific complains. What exactly if this
lot of hassle ?

-- 


Olivier Lecarme
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 18:26 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:

 I'm not aware of any interaction with the layer mask which requires Alt  
 and mouse movement (only click, which isn't a problem). Moving a selected  
 region is a very common action and now seems impossible under normal Linux  
 user interfaces. I can see the application of capricious to that  
 situation. What was the benefit of changing the default drag action?

Moving a selected region does not involve the Alt key in GIMP 2.4. What
changed compared to 2.2 is that you need to float the selected pixels
before you can move them. The benefit from this is that the new
rectangle and ellipse select tools (as well as the crop tool) now allow
you to edit the selection. Most users see this as a major improvement.
Details about this change can be found at
http://gui.gimp.org/index.php/Selection_%2B_crop_tool_specification

We are open to improving these tools further and there is at least one
change planned for 2.6 that is supposed to make it easier to select and
move pixels. But it is not all impossible in 2.4, even if your Alt key
is blocked. We are not stupid and know very well that some window
managers decided to take away the Alt key. So we take care not to make
any functionality depend on this modifier key.


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Daniel Hornung
On Thursday 20 December 2007, Robert Smits wrote:

 Windows key? What is this mythical key? It is certainly not evident on any
 of my keyboards.

It's the one with the flying (i.e. moving) window.  But I'm afraid some 
malicous company grabbed it as their trade mark without even implementing the 
moving of windows properly or understanding the concepts of modern window 
managers.  Since penguins can't fly (but slide, at least downhill), there are 
some keyboards with those cute little creatures on instead.


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Scott
On Thursday 20 December 2007 10:26:12 am Thomas Worthington 
wrote:
 Moving a selected region is a very common action and
 now seems impossible under normal Linux user interfaces. I can
 see the application of capricious to that situation. What
 was the benefit of changing the default drag action?

Actually, moving a selection in Gimp 2.4 is easier than it was in 
2.2. Simply left click within the selected region and drag... no 
modifier keys needed and no need to grab the edge of the 
selection when doing so. I just did this in 2.4.1 in KDE 3.5.8 
on Kubuntu 7.10. The new selection tool features are much easier 
to use if you haven't already been trained to use the old 
methods from previous releases.

 Suggesting that a system-wide setting should be changed to
 accomodate one application's arbitary decision that all users
 must use Alt instead of any number of other spare keys that
 keyboards have (AltGr, Windows, Menus, Meta, whatever) when it
 is well known that Alt-drag is used by desktops is perverse
 and lazy.

 The problem seems to be with GTK rather than Gimp, to be fair.
 But it would have been nice if Gimp allowed it to be worked
 around. If it was the only problem with 2.4 I would do
 something about it myself by way of a patch, but it isn't and
 I've just personally had enough with 2.4. It offers very
 little new for a lot of hassle with functions that used to
 work fine.

Seems to me that with the new way of moving a selection in 2.4 
that modifying a system-wide setting (Alt+Left-Click to move a 
window in KDE) is no longer necessary. That is a good thing. But 
if you want to go back to 2.2 and deal with its more familiar, 
but also less compatible, way of working, I understand... I 
guess... I think... maybe not.
-- 
Scott
Linux user #: 246504
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread JC Dill
Olivier Lecarme wrote:
 JC Dill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

   
 Thomas Worthington wrote:
 
 I've just reverted to 2.2

 2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final straw.
   
 I've been lurking on this list for several years.  I'd LOVE to be able 
 to use Gimp instead of paying the ever increasing price of Photoshop. 
 But Gimp is NOT a suitable replacement for Photoshop for most image 
 editing professionals and this alt-key problem highlights why.  Gimp 
 programmers make capricious changes in the software with total disregard 
 for their user community.  They expect that all users are programmers, 
 that they can work around bad design decisions, handle bad UI decisions, 
 deal with poor documentation, write their own patches, etc.

 Gimp will never come into general use until these issues are fixed. 
 Firefox is a true competitor to IE because the Firefox development team 
 understands these issues and built a product that average computer 
 users can easily use.  The Gimp development team should give this 
 serious consideration.  It doesn't take a lot of work to fix Gimp - it 
 just requires a small change in focus - design the program for 
 non-programmers to USE, don't make capricious changes, don't BREAK 
 things when you introduce new versions.
 

 I generally remain silent in front of so strong statements, but this one
 is too typical. 

 Could you be only a little specific about these capricious changes?
 And what is this alt-key problem? 
   

As was stated in the first post in this thread:

 Is there any way to restore the Alt key to its old usage in 2.4? I can't  
 drag selections anymore because it requires Alt and mouse at the same  
 time, which is a problem on Linux. How do I tell Gimp to use another  
 shift-type key for that action?

The behavior and use of the Alt key changed between 2.2 and 2.4, without 
providing any way for users to select or configure the older behavior in 
Gimp.  That is showing disregard for your established user base.  You 
may have good reasons to decide the new behavior is better but you 
should provide a way (within the software itself) for the user to 
configure the older behavior  (in Gimp) rather than force them to go 
back to a prior version to use the software they way they have been 
using it, or to change how they use the software.  This is basic 
backwards compatibility.

 Note that such comments always come from people calling them
 true professionals, as if anybody else would be simple and stupid
 amateurs...

Now you resort to an ad hominem attack of the messenger instead of 
listening to the message. 

I've seen this happen several times over my years of lurking on this 
list.  I didn't call myself a true professional - I  stated that I'm a 
professional photographer solely to give you context for my comments. 

I'm a typical potential Gimp user.  I tried to use it many years ago 
(when I first joined this list) but it couldn't meet my needs.  I've 
remained interested in Gimp, and stayed on the list to lurk and learn.  
I had hope that someday it would develop into a software product that I 
could use instead of Photoshop.  I provided this background so you would 
understand the context for my comment - not to say I'm in any way better 
or special.  If you want users like me to embrace and use Gimp you must 
consider our needs and comments when you make design decisions.  The 
fact that few outside the programmer community use Gimp shows that you 
are not making inroads into this other possible user base - it's clearly 
because you don't keep these other users in mind when you design the 
program and UI.

A programmer friend (Linux user/programmer, avid open source proponent) 
asked me recently if I thought he should recommend Gimp to another 
friend.  I told him what I'm telling you - it's not suitable for a 
non-programmer, especially when there are other choices (as abound on 
Windows and Mac OSs).  There are a plethora of easier-to-use free 
products (like Irfanview) - if someone needs more tools than those free 
products offer, they are MUCH better off paying for Photoshop or 
Photoshop Elements than dealing with the quirky nature of Gimp and 
subject to the capricious changes that occur as new versions are rolled 
out.  The benefit of saving a few bucks isn't worth the multitude of 
problems - particularly the poor documentation and lack of support.  A 
Photoshop user has thousands of web forums and millions of other PS 
users as resources to learn how to do something in PS.  Try taking any 
PS tutorial (especially one about programming an action) and applying to 
to Gimp.  This is impossible for most users!  So those resources aren't 
available to Gimp users.  I came to this forum because I was trying to 
do something in PS and I was told oh, you can do that in Gimp.   I 
downloaded Gimp, tried to figure it out (and was dismayed at the poor 
documentation) and I came here for help.   I couldn't get Gimp 

Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Daniel Hornung
On Thursday 20 December 2007, Scott wrote:

 Actually, moving a selection in Gimp 2.4 is easier than it was in
 2.2. Simply left click within the selected region and drag... no
 modifier keys needed and no need to grab the edge of the
 selection when doing so. I just did this in 2.4.1 in KDE 3.5.8
 on Kubuntu 7.10. The new selection tool features are much easier
 to use if you haven't already been trained to use the old
 methods from previous releases.

Are we talking about the same thing?  This thread's issue is (or so it seems 
to me) about moving the _content_ of a selection, as described in 
http://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-using-selections.html#gimp-using-selections-moving

Yes, to simply move the border, you can also use the move tool in selection 
mode, without needing any modifer key.


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 11:17 -0800, JC Dill wrote:


 The behavior and use of the Alt key changed between 2.2 and 2.4, without 
 providing any way for users to select or configure the older behavior in 
 Gimp.  That is showing disregard for your established user base.  You 
 may have good reasons to decide the new behavior is better but you 
 should provide a way (within the software itself) for the user to 
 configure the older behavior  (in Gimp) rather than force them to go 
 back to a prior version to use the software they way they have been 
 using it, or to change how they use the software.  This is basic 
 backwards compatibility.

Adding such an option adds a considerable amount of complexity to the
code. We would have to maintain the old and the new code which means
doubling the amount of code and thus doubling the chance for bugs and
doubling the effort needed to maintain it. Sorry, but that is not an
option.

We try hard to improve GIMP and that requires making changes to the user
interface. Of course such changes have an impact on established
work-flows and we know that. But if we want to move forward, then that
is not avoidable.


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 11:17 -0800, JC Dill wrote:

 I'm a typical potential Gimp user.  I tried to use it many years ago 
 (when I first joined this list) but it couldn't meet my needs.  I've 
 remained interested in Gimp, and stayed on the list to lurk and learn.  
 I had hope that someday it would develop into a software product that I 
 could use instead of Photoshop.  I provided this background so you would 
 understand the context for my comment - not to say I'm in any way better 
 or special.  If you want users like me to embrace and use Gimp you must 
 consider our needs and comments when you make design decisions.  The 
 fact that few outside the programmer community use Gimp shows that you 
 are not making inroads into this other possible user base - it's clearly 
 because you don't keep these other users in mind when you design the 
 program and UI.

I don't know where you get that impression from. The ongoing redesign of
the user interface is based on an extensive analysis of user feedback,
workspace observations and analysis by user interface professionals. Our
UI team is working on this for more than a year now, spending about
twenty hours per week. And they are doing this in their free time. We,
the developers, then pick up their suggestions and spend our free time
implementing them. It would be nice if you could show some appreciation
for this work. There are certainly many things that can be done even
better. We are just beginning to incorporate the results of the
usability evaluation that took place.


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread JC Dill
Sven Neumann wrote:
 Hi,

 On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 11:17 -0800, JC Dill wrote:

   
 I'm a typical potential Gimp user.  I tried to use it many years ago 
 (when I first joined this list) but it couldn't meet my needs.  I've 
 remained interested in Gimp, and stayed on the list to lurk and learn.  
 I had hope that someday it would develop into a software product that I 
 could use instead of Photoshop.  I provided this background so you would 
 understand the context for my comment - not to say I'm in any way better 
 or special.  If you want users like me to embrace and use Gimp you must 
 consider our needs and comments when you make design decisions.  The 
 fact that few outside the programmer community use Gimp shows that you 
 are not making inroads into this other possible user base - it's clearly 
 because you don't keep these other users in mind when you design the 
 program and UI.
 

 I don't know where you get that impression from. 
I get that impression from reading the posts on this list.
 The ongoing redesign of
 the user interface is based on an extensive analysis of user feedback,
 workspace observations and analysis by user interface professionals. Our
 UI team is working on this for more than a year now, spending about
 twenty hours per week. And they are doing this in their free time. We,
 the developers, then pick up their suggestions and spend our free time
 implementing them. It would be nice if you could show some appreciation
 for this work. 
This is the first I heard of this work.  How do you expect someone to 
appreciate something that they haven't heard about?
 There are certainly many things that can be done even
 better. We are just beginning to incorporate the results of the
 usability evaluation that took place.

You admit you are just beginning to incorporate the results of the 
usability evaluation.

I can hardly be expected to know about something that hasn't been 
incorporated, or has just recently been incorporated but not widely 
announced.  As I said - I'm a potential Gimp user.  I tried it several 
years ago, and I am subscribed to this list to stay abreast with the 
changes that are discussed on this list.  I don't currently have it 
installed.  Like millions of other potential Gimp users, I don't have 
time to install and test it every time you release a new version to see 
if it's ready for prime time yet.  Rather than try to convince me it's 
great (while you also admit you are just beginning to incorporate 
needed changes as a result of a usability evaluation), it would be nice 
if you would just admit that it still needs a lot of work, and that you 
will let the user (and potential user) community know when you have 
actually done the work to make it easier to use for non-programmers.

I hope that documentation is high on your list.  This is one of the 
weakest parts of most open source projects.  Something like a browser 
needs little documentation.  Something more complex like a mail reader 
needs more documentation.   It's no coincidence that Firefox has more 
users than Thunderbird - the documentation in Thunderbird is not very 
complete.  Gimp was (the last time I used it) very poorly documented.  
It is very important to document not just new features but also anytime 
you change how a feature works - such as this alt-key issue. 

jc



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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Scott
On Thursday 20 December 2007 11:30:40 am Daniel Hornung wrote:

  Actually, moving a selection in Gimp 2.4 is easier than it
  was in 2.2. Simply left click within the selected region and
  drag... no modifier keys needed and no need to grab the edge
  of the selection when doing so. I just did this in 2.4.1 in
  KDE 3.5.8 on Kubuntu 7.10. The new selection tool features
  are much easier to use if you haven't already been trained
  to use the old methods from previous releases.

 Are we talking about the same thing?  This thread's issue is
 (or so it seems to me) about moving the _content_ of a
 selection, as described in
 http://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-using-selections.html#gimp-using-
selections-moving

 Yes, to simply move the border, you can also use the move tool
 in selection mode, without needing any modifer key.

Actually, the documentation you cite states: If you only want to 
move the selection border and not its contents, then press the 
Alt key and click-and-drag the selection.

That is the old behavior from 2.2 and required changing the 
behavior of the same key combination in Window environments such 
as KDE. The new behavior does not require this. In fact, trying 
to use the old behavior in the new version does not work. This 
is the issue the op is having: I can't drag selections anymore 
because it requires Alt and mouse at the same  
time, which is a problem on Linux. He just needs to leave Alt 
alone and drag the selection (not its contents) by clicking in 
within the borders of the selection.
-- 
Scott
Linux user #: 246504
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Scott
On Thursday 20 December 2007 11:17:17 am JC Dill wrote:

  Is there any way to restore the Alt key to its old usage in
  2.4? I can't drag selections anymore because it requires Alt
  and mouse at the same time, which is a problem on Linux. How
  do I tell Gimp to use another shift-type key for that
  action?

 The behavior and use of the Alt key changed between 2.2 and
 2.4, without providing any way for users to select or
 configure the older behavior in Gimp.  That is showing
 disregard for your established user base.

You already said you are not among that user base, I'm a 
typical 'potential Gimp user'. Why are you acting all hurt over 
this change; it doesn't affect you?

 you should provide a way (within the software itself) for the 
 user to configure the older behavior... This is basic backwards
 compatibility.

Backward compatibility is not the holy grail of interface design. 
If it were, we would all still be using the command-line... or 
punch cards for that matter.

 The fact that few outside the programmer community
 use Gimp

I don't think this is a given. I, for one, am not a programmer. 
There is a thriving non-programmer GIMP user community forum at 
http://gimptalk.com/. GIMP's user base may not be as large as 
Photoshop's, but it is not a given that it is largely 
programmers using it. I also personally know at least two 
professional photographers (they make their living doing 
photography) who use GIMP for all their digital image processing 
who are not programmers, either. I had a conversation with one 
of them less than a month ago. He said that GIMP provides all 
the necessary tools a professional photographer needs.

You say:
 it's not suitable for a non-programmer...

And then:
 Try taking any
 PS tutorial (especially one about programming an action) and
 applying to to Gimp.  This is impossible for most users!  So
 those resources aren't available to Gimp users.

Without dwelling on the obvious contradiction in your remarks, 
GIMP does not attempt to clone Photoshop. I would not expect 
macros written for any program to work in any other that was not 
intended to clone that product. But if you insist, your argument 
could as easily be turned around and applied to making PS do 
what a tutorial or macro does in GIMP. Would it be easy to 
achieve the same results in PS without significantly reworking 
the examples? Probably not. Should we heap shame on PS for its 
poor compatibility with GIMP solutions? I don't think so.

 You can learn from my feedback, or you can attack the
 messenger again, as you wish.

Or, we can also point out the flaws in your argument. What tools 
does Photoshop provide to professional photographers that is not 
only lacking in GIMP, but that have escaped the notice of my 
professional photographer acquaintances?
-- 
Scott
Linux user #: 246504
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 12:37 -0800, JC Dill wrote:

 Gimp was (the last time I used it) very poorly documented.  
 It is very important to document not just new features but also anytime 
 you change how a feature works - such as this alt-key issue. 

I don't think a user manual of more than 500 pages counts as very poorly
documented. Yes, documentation is considered very important.
Unfortunately it is not enough to put it high on the priority list,
there also need to be individuals that are willing to contribute.
Fortunately we have a small but very active group of volunteers working
on the documentation. But they could certainly need more help. There is
still a lot to be done to bring the user manual up-to-date for 2.4. If
you want to help, please go to http://docs.gimp.org/ and check the
paragraph at the bottom.

(And now I am sure you are going to tell us once more how Firefox does
this a lot better...)


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 19:05:39 -, Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Thursday 20 December 2007 10:26:12 am Thomas Worthington
 wrote:
 Moving a selected region is a very common action and
 now seems impossible under normal Linux user interfaces. I can
 see the application of capricious to that situation. What
 was the benefit of changing the default drag action?

 Actually, moving a selection in Gimp 2.4 is easier than it was in
 2.2. Simply left click within the selected region and drag... no
 modifier keys needed and no need to grab the edge of the
 selection when doing so. I just did this in 2.4.1 in KDE 3.5.8
 on Kubuntu 7.10. The new selection tool features are much easier
 to use if you haven't already been trained to use the old
 methods from previous releases.

You are describing what 2.2 does for me. 2.4 simply dragged the selected  
region, NOT its contents.

 Seems to me that with the new way of moving a selection in 2.4
 that modifying a system-wide setting (Alt+Left-Click to move a
 window in KDE) is no longer necessary. That is a good thing. But
 if you want to go back to 2.2 and deal with its more familiar,
 but also less compatible, way of working, I understand... I
 guess... I think... maybe not.

Well, all I can say is that 2.4 did not do what you describe for me  
shrug.

TW
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 20:37:02 -, JC Dill [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
wrote:

 I hope that documentation is high on your list.  This is one of the
 weakest parts of most open source projects.  Something like a browser
 needs little documentation.  Something more complex like a mail reader
 needs more documentation.   It's no coincidence that Firefox has more
 users than Thunderbird - the documentation in Thunderbird is not very
 complete.  Gimp was (the last time I used it) very poorly documented.
 It is very important to document not just new features but also anytime
 you change how a feature works - such as this alt-key issue.


I recommend Beginning Gimp by Akkana Peck, ISBN 1-59059-587-4

TW
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread norman
 Big snip 

 I've seen this happen several times over my years of lurking on this 
 list.  I didn't call myself a true professional - I  stated that I'm a 
 professional photographer solely to give you context for my comments. 

I also lurk and very occasionally make a contribution. You photograph
horses and things and people around them and doubtless sell the images
and make a good living. I am an amateur photographer and making images
is my hobby. Equipment is expensive enough and I am very grateful for
Gimp because I certainly could not afford Photoshop. I have the time to
view helpful videos and read articles, which you may not have and I even
bought a book which shows me around the latest version of Gimp. There
are far more people like me in the world than like you and for us Gimp
is very good, thank you. 

Norman

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread norman
 snip 
 
 I recommend Beginning Gimp by Akkana Peck, ISBN 1-59059-587-4

I fully agree.

Norman

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 18:08:44 -, Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi,

 On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 14:46 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:
 I've just reverted to 2.2

 2.4 has too many problems to bother with; the alt key is the final  
 straw.

 Sorry, but if there are problems with 2.4, then we would like to hear
 about them. So far the feedback has been very positive. And nothing
 really changed with regard to the Alt key, compared to 2.2. So what
 exactly are you talking about?


The alt-key is covered in other posts but the other killer problem for me  
in 2.4 is the lack of a ratio display or lock on the crop tool. I need to  
crop to a ratio a lot and a display that always reads current is no use.  
It literally means I have to get the calculator out; I can do that, but  
arguing with the Alt key at the same time is too much. 2.2 just works.

Also, I seem to have to click the mouse a lot in different places to get  
the aligment tool to activate its buttons. This is not such a big deal as  
the other things but is tedious.

There were a couple of other niggles (and total confusion about printing  
which was probably my own fault), but I've deleted 2.4 now.

TW

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 21:46 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:

 The alt-key is covered in other posts but the other killer problem for me
 in 2.4 is the lack of a ratio display or lock on the crop tool. I need to  
 crop to a ratio a lot and a display that always reads current is no use.  
 It literally means I have to get the calculator out; I can do that, but  
 arguing with the Alt key at the same time is too much. 2.2 just works.

That is actually the point where the 2.4 crop tool is a lot superior
than the one in 2.2. Not only does it not pop up an annoying dialog as
soon as you start to use it. It also features an entry for the aspect
ratio that has a calculator built into it. You enter the desired aspect
ratio in the Crop tool options, like 16:9, and it will use that whenever
you press Shift (or lock the ratio using the check button next to the
entry). Quite useful as soon as you discovered it. The fact that you
didn't discover it should make us think though...


Sven


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[Gimp-user] please remove me

2007-12-20 Thread Deborah R. Wood
 

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Re: [Gimp-user] Palettes Pop Menu Missing Options in Gimp 2.4.2

2007-12-20 Thread D.Jones (aka) Capnhud
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 10:19 -0800, D.Jones (aka) Capnhud wrote:
 According the the Gimp documentation you can sort a palette. How do you do 
 this?
Because
 when I right click a palette the options 9-12 are missing on a palette that I 
 created 

Looks like you don't have Python on your computer then. The palette
manipulation you are looking for is implemented by Python plug-ins.
Since GIMP 2.4, the Python binding is the recommended scripting language
for GIMP and we expect that more and more functionality will be
implemented using Python.


Sven

Thanks instead all the necessary python components and all is well thanks once 
again



  

Never miss a thing.  Make Yahoo your home page. 
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread JC Dill
Scott wrote:
 On Thursday 20 December 2007 11:17:17 am JC Dill wrote:

   
 Is there any way to restore the Alt key to its old usage in
 2.4? I can't drag selections anymore because it requires Alt
 and mouse at the same time, which is a problem on Linux. How
 do I tell Gimp to use another shift-type key for that
 action?
   
 The behavior and use of the Alt key changed between 2.2 and
 2.4, without providing any way for users to select or
 configure the older behavior in Gimp.  That is showing
 disregard for your established user base.
 

 You already said you are not among that user base, I'm a 
 typical 'potential Gimp user'. Why are you acting all hurt over 
 this change; it doesn't affect you?
   

Oh, but it does.  If you do this type of thing now (and don't see 
anything wrong with it), you can be expected to do it again.  If I start 
with Gimp now, at some point I'll be urged to upgrade to take advantage 
of new features, but then discover that you changed how the program 
works - that old workflows no longer work in the same way. 

 you should provide a way (within the software itself) for the 
 user to configure the older behavior... This is basic backwards
 compatibility.
 

 Backward compatibility is not the holy grail of interface design. 
   
Are you an interface designer, or a programmer?
 If it were, we would all still be using the command-line...

The command line still works - and breaking command line programs when 
an OS is upgraded is one of the biggest problems with OS upgrades.  You 
can put new features over the old (e.g. add a GUI over a command line 
interface), but you shouldn't break old features or old commands when 
you do that.
 The fact that few outside the programmer community
 use Gimp
 

 I don't think this is a given. 
I assert that it's is quite obviously a given - based on the lack of 
widespread adoption of this program and continued strong sales for a 
similar program that costs hundreds of dollars.  Why would people be 
buying Photoshop if Gimp were just as good and just as easy to use?  
Look at the adoption of Firefox when IE is free - if IE costs hundreds 
per computer Firefox would have totally taken over the market by now.  
The only reason IE has the user base it has is because MS gives it away 
for free and embeds it in the OS.  But Photoshop is not given away for 
free, and is not embedded in the OS.  Instead, people pay hundreds of 
dollars - usually every few years for the next version, to buy PS 
instead of using free Gimp.  Clearly there are huge benefits for the 
average (non-programmer) user to stick with PS.
 I, for one, am not a programmer. 
 There is a thriving non-programmer GIMP user community forum at 
 http://gimptalk.com/. GIMP's user base may not be as large as 
 Photoshop's, but it is not a given that it is largely 
 programmers using it. I also personally know at least two 
 professional photographers (they make their living doing 
 photography) who use GIMP for all their digital image processing 
 who are not programmers, either. I had a conversation with one 
 of them less than a month ago. He said that GIMP provides all 
 the necessary tools a professional photographer needs.
   
I don't know of any professional photographer who doesn't use Actions.  
You can't record an action in Gimp - you have to program it.  This 
makes it much harder to use for non-programmers, and makes it impossible 
to use Photoshop Actions recorded by others.

I do know some photographers who use Gimp - they are all programmers, 
all happy to spend their time fiddling with the programming aspects 
rather than having the tool do the hard work (actions) while they do the 
creative work (creative edits).

 You say:
   
 it's not suitable for a non-programmer...
 

 And then:
   
 Try taking any
 PS tutorial (especially one about programming an action) and
 applying to to Gimp.  This is impossible for most users!  So
 those resources aren't available to Gimp users.
 

 Without dwelling on the obvious contradiction in your remarks, 
   
There is no contradiction. 
 GIMP does not attempt to clone Photoshop. I would not expect 
 macros written for any program to work in any other that was not 
 intended to clone that product.
I'm talking about following the concept of creating an action, following 
the ideas in the tutorial.  The concept of here is a way to do a thing 
and here is a way to program your software to do this thing over and 
over automagically is not new in image editing software.  Many methods 
of how to do a thing in PS and Gimp are similar (e.g. how to use a 
given editing tool such as a paintbrush or eraser), but the method for 
doing something over and over is fast and easy in PS (record an action) 
and laborious and complicated in Gimp (script-fu).
  But if you insist, your argument 
 could as easily be turned around and applied to making PS do 
 what a tutorial or macro does in GIMP. Would it be easy to 
 achieve the same 

Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Thomas Worthington
On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 22:00:40 -, Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 That is actually the point where the 2.4 crop tool is a lot superior
 than the one in 2.2. Not only does it not pop up an annoying dialog as
 soon as you start to use it. It also features an entry for the aspect
 ratio that has a calculator built into it. You enter the desired aspect
 ratio in the Crop tool options, like 16:9, and it will use that whenever
 you press Shift (or lock the ratio using the check button next to the
 entry). Quite useful as soon as you discovered it. The fact that you
 didn't discover it should make us think though...


So even when I go to the bother of typing in the ratio I want, I have to  
hold shift down or it ignores it, stops displaying it and says current  
instead?! Isn't the fact that I made the effort to type something in  
enough of a hint that I want it to be applied? That's really terrible.

And why on Earth would you not at least display the actual ratio as the  
user works? Changing that (as compared to 2.2 which DOES display the  
current ratio) was just nuts, frankly.

What should the fact that you thought that was a sensible way of doing it  
make me think about you?

This discussion isn't going anywhere - you think 2.4 is a big improvement  
on 2.2 and I don't, is the bottom line here. I'm sure you have your  
reasons and I'm sure you think they're good reasons. But at the end of the  
day none of 2.2's big shortcomings (16bit workspace, CMYK) have really  
been addressed and what has been done is, to me, sloppy and mostly  
superficial work. The layout of menus is tidier, although the new icons  
are fairly ugly so UI-wise I think it's only a minor improvement overall.

I'll wait for 2.6 and in the meantime happily use 2.2, which is a great  
program.

TW

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Michael Schumacher
JC Dill wrote:

 Perhaps you haven't been reading very carefully as I've already told you 
 the #1 stopper - Gimp has no way to record a series of edits and then 
 apply that same series of edits to other images. 

This is what the following enhancement request deals with:
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51937

As you can see in the comments, adding this isn't quite straight-forward.



HTH,
Michael

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Michael Schumacher
Thomas Worthington wrote:

 This discussion isn't going anywhere - you think 2.4 is a big improvement  
 on 2.2 and I don't, is the bottom line here. I'm sure you have your  
 reasons and I'm sure you think they're good reasons.

The reasons are described in detail at
http://gui.gimp.org/index.php/Selection_%2B_crop_tool_specification


HTH,
Michael

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread David Gowers
On Dec 21, 2007 9:04 AM, Thomas Worthington [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 22:00:40 -, Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  That is actually the point where the 2.4 crop tool is a lot superior
  than the one in 2.2. Not only does it not pop up an annoying dialog as
  soon as you start to use it. It also features an entry for the aspect
  ratio that has a calculator built into it. You enter the desired aspect
  ratio in the Crop tool options, like 16:9, and it will use that whenever
  you press Shift (or lock the ratio using the check button next to the
  entry). Quite useful as soon as you discovered it. The fact that you
  didn't discover it should make us think though...
 

 So even when I go to the bother of typing in the ratio I want, I have to
 hold shift down or it ignores it, stops displaying it and says current
 instead?!
No.

 Isn't the fact that I made the effort to type something in
 enough of a hint that I want it to be applied? That's really terrible.
Stop babbling and actually try it out.
Me, I type 1:6 into the ratio box, it remains there, clearly visible,
I check the 'Fixed' checkbox and go making 1:6 ratio'd selections.
(the combobox should be set to 'Aspect Ratio', obviously.)


 And why on Earth would you not at least display the actual ratio as the
 user works? Changing that (as compared to 2.2 which DOES display the
It does display the current ratio. See the 'size' boxes. If you want
to use that as a fixed ratio, you just type it in like any other
ratio.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

On Thu, 2007-12-20 at 22:34 +, Thomas Worthington wrote:

 What should the fact that you thought that was a sensible way of doing it  
 make me think about you?

Actually I am responsible for most design choices in the Crop tool UI in
GIMP 2.2. Glad you like it :P


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Jeffery Small
Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

That is actually the point where the 2.4 crop tool is a lot superior
than the one in 2.2. Not only does it not pop up an annoying dialog as
soon as you start to use it. It also features an entry for the aspect
ratio that has a calculator built into it. You enter the desired aspect
ratio in the Crop tool options, like 16:9, and it will use that whenever
you press Shift (or lock the ratio using the check button next to the
entry).


Sven:

In my 2.4.2 version running on Solaris 10/SPARC under gnome, the check-box
does lock the crop aspect ratio.  But if the check box is not selected, no
key, including shift, seems to lock the aspect ratio and as soon as you
drag out the crop window, the previously set aspect ratio is changed to
Current.  Is that a potential bug in the Solaris build or am I missing
something?  In any case, I don't mind the current implementation.

Regards,
-- 
Jeffery Small

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Geoffrey
JC Dill wrote:

 I can hardly be expected to know about something that hasn't been 
 incorporated, or has just recently been incorporated but not widely 
 announced.  As I said - I'm a potential Gimp user.  I tried it several 
 years ago, and I am subscribed to this list to stay abreast with the 
 changes that are discussed on this list.  I don't currently have it 
 installed.  Like millions of other potential Gimp users, I don't have 
 time to install and test it every time you release a new version to see 
 if it's ready for prime time yet.  Rather than try to convince me it's 
 great (while you also admit you are just beginning to incorporate 
 needed changes as a result of a usability evaluation), it would be nice 
 if you would just admit that it still needs a lot of work, and that you 
 will let the user (and potential user) community know when you have 
 actually done the work to make it easier to use for non-programmers.


Troll back to Photoshop please.

I for one, appreciate the work the GIMP developers have done and 
continue to do on this wonderful application.  JC, you just doesn't get 
it.  I guess you missed the reference to the fact that ALL the work put 
into GIMP is done by the developers on their time.

-- 
Until later, Geoffrey

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little
temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
  - Benjamin Franklin
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Akkana Peck
 Sven Neumann [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 You enter the desired aspect
 ratio in the Crop tool options, like 16:9, and it will use that whenever
 you press Shift (or lock the ratio using the check button next to the

Jeffery Small writes:
 In my 2.4.2 version running on Solaris 10/SPARC under gnome, the check-box
 does lock the crop aspect ratio.  But if the check box is not selected, no
 key, including shift, seems to lock the aspect ratio 

For me (on Linux), Shift locks the aspect ratio, but only if I press
it after I start dragging. If I hold Shift before I start the drag,
it doesn't do anything as far as I can tell. Is that intentional?

That said, I love the new crop tool. I do a lot of fixed aspect
ratio crops, and it's SO much easier now than it was with 2.2.

...Akkana
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Eric P
Geoffrey wrote:
 JC Dill wrote:
 
 I can hardly be expected to know about something that hasn't been 
 incorporated, or has just recently been incorporated but not widely 
 announced.  As I said - I'm a potential Gimp user.  I tried it several 
 years ago, and I am subscribed to this list to stay abreast with the 
 changes that are discussed on this list.  I don't currently have it 
 installed.  Like millions of other potential Gimp users, I don't have 
 time to install and test it every time you release a new version to see 
 if it's ready for prime time yet.  Rather than try to convince me it's 
 great (while you also admit you are just beginning to incorporate 
 needed changes as a result of a usability evaluation), it would be nice 
 if you would just admit that it still needs a lot of work, and that you 
 will let the user (and potential user) community know when you have 
 actually done the work to make it easier to use for non-programmers.
 
 
 Troll back to Photoshop please.
 
 I for one, appreciate the work the GIMP developers have done and 
 continue to do on this wonderful application.  JC, you just doesn't get 
 it.  I guess you missed the reference to the fact that ALL the work put 
 into GIMP is done by the developers on their time.
 

My sentiments exactly!

GIMP on!

Eric P.
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Scott
On Thursday 20 December 2007 2:20:36 pm JC Dill wrote:

  Is there any way to restore the Alt key to its old usage
  in 2.4? I can't drag selections anymore because it
  requires Alt and mouse at the same time, which is a
  problem on Linux. How do I tell Gimp to use another
  shift-type key for that action?
 
  The behavior and use of the Alt key changed between 2.2 and
  2.4, without providing any way for users to select or
  configure the older behavior in Gimp.  That is showing
  disregard for your established user base.
 
  You already said you are not among that user base, I'm a
  typical 'potential Gimp user'. Why are you acting all hurt
  over this change; it doesn't affect you?

 Oh, but it does.  If you do this type of thing now (and don't
 see anything wrong with it), you can be expected to do it
 again.  If I start with Gimp now, at some point I'll be urged
 to upgrade to take advantage of new features, but then
 discover that you changed how the program works - that old
 workflows no longer work in the same way.

So what? Program interfaces do change. Even Photoshop's:
http://www.news.com/8301-13580_3-9811974-39.html

November 6, 2007 1:12 PM PST
Brace yourself for Adobe's Photoshop overhaul
Posted by Stephen Shankland

Adobe Systems wants to transform its flagship Photoshop software 
with an interface customized to the task at hand, a potentially 
radical revamp for software whose power today is hidden behind 
hundreds of menu options.

A new user interface will help Photoshop become 'everything you 
need, nothing you don't,' said Photoshop product manager John 
Nack, describing aspirations for the Photoshop overhaul on his 
blog Monday...

A new Photoshop approach could let new users get started faster, 
help Adobe phase out old features...

Phase out old features? Change the user interface? They are 
talking about doing all of this without breaking current work 
flows, but I doubt they will be able to achieve that. And the 
changes they want to make are not small, incremental changes. 
They are talking about sweeping, radical changes to the user 
interface. They are also talking about making it a modular 
program, meaning you purchase it in pieces, making it more 
expensive than it already is.

Instead of focusing your energy criticizing a program you don't 
even use, you'd better give your input to the company behind the 
tool you already rely on before it's too late. I'm sure they'd be 
happy to put you in direct contact with the developers 
responsible for implementing the new user interface, whoever 
they are.

  you should provide a way (within the software itself) for
  the user to configure the older behavior... This is basic
  backwards compatibility.
 
  Backward compatibility is not the holy grail of interface
  design.

 Are you an interface designer, or a programmer?

  If it were, we would all still be using the command-line...

 The command line still works - and breaking command line
 programs when an OS is upgraded is one of the biggest problems
 with OS upgrades.  You can put new features over the old (e.g.
 add a GUI over a command line interface), but you shouldn't
 break old features or old commands when you do that.

Unless you have a good reason... The GIMP developers had a good 
reason for changing GIMP's behavior as has been explained to 
you. And the changes to the GIMP's interface are not radical. 
They are incremental and relatively easy to adapt to.

  The fact that few outside the programmer community
  use Gimp
 
  I don't think this is a given.

 I assert that it's is quite obviously a given - based on the
 lack of widespread adoption of this program and continued
 strong sales for a similar program that costs hundreds of
 dollars.  

There is no obvious connection between lack of widespread 
adoption and a high percentage of programmer users. You haven't 
provided anything to back up this claim other than because I say 
so.

 Why would people be buying Photoshop if Gimp were 
 just as good and just as easy to use?

Simple. They are unaware of the alternatives available to them.

  I, for one, am not a programmer.
  There is a thriving non-programmer GIMP user community forum
  at http://gimptalk.com/. GIMP's user base may not be as
  large as Photoshop's, but it is not a given that it is
  largely programmers using it. I also personally know at
  least two professional photographers (they make their living
  doing photography) who use GIMP for all their digital image
  processing who are not programmers, either. I had a
  conversation with one of them less than a month ago. He said
  that GIMP provides all the necessary tools a professional
  photographer needs.

 I don't know of any professional photographer who doesn't use
 Actions. You can't record an action in Gimp - you have to
 program it.  This makes it much harder to use for
 non-programmers, and makes it impossible to use Photoshop
 Actions recorded by others.

I don't find it hard to use. And GIMP 

Re: [Gimp-user] please remove me

2007-12-20 Thread Geoffrey
Deborah R. Wood wrote:

If you go to the website listed below (and in every message to the 
list), you can remove yourself from the list.  This is the general 
expectation on virtually all email lists because as you know, you 
subscribed yourself.  It's kind of like 'you let yourself in, you can 
let yourself out.'

 https://lists.XCF.Berkeley.EDU/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user


-- 
Until later, Geoffrey

Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little
temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
  - Benjamin Franklin
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Re: [Gimp-user] Top Plug Ins

2007-12-20 Thread Burnie
The HarinskiS wrote:

 Hi

  

 My name is Vicky and looking enjoying playing with Gimp. I like to 
 know what are the best plug ins to install to really utilize the tool 
 as a beginner

  

 Thank you

 Vicky

 

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Even without any extra plugins, I've found the GIMP a really rich tool
-- although it takes more than just a bit of exploring to find out all
the things it can do. I've been playing around over a year and haven't
yet got there - I got a great boost out of Akkana Peck's book Beginning
Gimp that I found at Barnes and Noble one day, and then found to my
delight that she occasionally posts here.

Burnie
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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread Jeffery Small

Jeffery Small writes:
 In my 2.4.2 version running on Solaris 10/SPARC under gnome, the check-box
 does lock the crop aspect ratio.  But if the check box is not selected, no
 key, including shift, seems to lock the aspect ratio 

Akkana Peck [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

For me (on Linux), Shift locks the aspect ratio, but only if I press
it after I start dragging. If I hold Shift before I start the drag,
it doesn't do anything as far as I can tell. Is that intentional?


Ah yes, now that Akkana pointed this out, this is how it is also working
on Solaris.  This behavior seems odd.  I think if you hold shift before
beginning to drag the mouse, then it should also lock the aspect ratio.

Regards,
--
Jeffery Small

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread julien

 You are describing what 2.2 does for me. 2.4 simply dragged the selected  
 region, NOT its contents.

   
At the top of HTML help pages, you have a Revision date and you can
see that Moving Selection has not been updated yet.

In Gimp 2.4, you move the selection outline.
To move the selection contents, you have to use the Selection/Floating
command.
You can't move the selection contents without emptying the original
place. But you can do a copy-paste for that.

j.h

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[Gimp-user] Math graphics

2007-12-20 Thread Brian Vanderburg II
Is there a plugin (or high speed script-fu) that would allow me to enter 
a math expression and from it create the pixel data also given a 
'viewport range'.

XMin: -1
XMax 1
YMin -1
Ymax: 1
UseGraient: no
Expr: red=sin(2*pi*x*y)/2+0.5;green=...,...

or
UseGradient: yes
Expr: offset=sin(2*pi*x*y)

Or something like that.  I imagine a script-fu could be done that could 
take the viewport, gradient, and expression and somehow execute the 
expression and plot the pixels, but it seems like script-fu would be 
somewhat slow.  I've created my own expression evaluation library which 
would easily provide all the math support I need, but don't know much 
about making GIMP plugins and since I'm only on Windows now I've had 
problems trying to compile glib/gtk under msys/mingw, plus it is C++ 
except an older version which is C.

Brian Vanderburg II

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Re: [Gimp-user] Alt Key

2007-12-20 Thread David Gowers
Hi julien,

On Dec 21, 2007 4:22 PM, julien [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  You are describing what 2.2 does for me. 2.4 simply dragged the selected
  region, NOT its contents.
 
 
 At the top of HTML help pages, you have a Revision date and you can
 see that Moving Selection has not been updated yet.

 In Gimp 2.4, you move the selection outline.
 To move the selection contents, you have to use the Selection/Floating
 command.
 You can't move the selection contents without emptying the original
 place.

Actually you can. Alt+Shift+Drag. (Alt+Ctrl+Drag to cut it out and
move it, instead of moving a copy of it.). Try them.
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