Paint Shop Pro 8 Power!

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Edit Operations

The Edit operations, which are all available both from the Edit menu and through keyboard shortcuts, include Cut , Copy , several Paste operations, and Clear . The basic Edit operations Cut , Copy , and Paste as New Image are also available as the standard Windows icons on the standard toolbar.

Cut and Copy

Basically, two ways exist to copy pixels to the Windows Clipboard, thereby making those pixels available for insertion elsewhere. Pixels can be either cut from an image, which both deletes the pixels from the original image and places them on the Clipboard, or copied from the image to the Clipboard, leaving the pixels in the original image as they were.

To cut all the pixels from a flat image or from a layer, choose E dit > Cu t or press Ctrl+X (the standard Windows shortcut for Cut). Alternatively, you can click the standard Windows Cut icon on the Paint Shop Pro Standard toolbar. If you want to cut only some of the pixels from the image or layer, first select the area that you want to cut, and then use any of the methods just mentioned to remove the selection from the original and place those pixels on the Clipboard.

You can copy pixels to the Clipboard just as easilyand in just as many ways. To copy all the pixels from a flat image or a layer, choose E dit > C opy or press Ctrl+C (the standard Windows shortcut for Copy ). You also can click the standard Windows Copy icon on the Paint Shop Pro Standard toolbar. As with Cut , you can copy portions of the image or layer by first making a selection and then applying Copy in any of the ways just mentioned.

Cut and Copy will take only the pixels on a single layer. To copy the pixels from all visible layers in an image, choose E dit > C o py Merged or press Shift+Ctrl+C. No equivalent way exists to perform a one-step Cut on all visible layers. Probably the best approach for cutting a multilayered selection is to do a Copy Merged (to create a copy that you can paste later) and then delete the selection on each individual layer by first making one layer active and pressing the Delete key, and then making the next layer active and pressing the Delete key, and so on. Turn off the selection only after you've finished making deletions on all the relevant layers.

When you cut or copy from a selection, keep in mind that any antialiasing or feathering of a selection affects the copy. With antialiasing or feathering, the edges of the copied area will be softened, picking up or blending into the original image's Background color or transparency. You can use this to your advantage when you later paste this material. But if you want a sharp edge on your copied material, be sure to uncheck Anti-alias and set Feather to 0 in the Tool Options palette before you make your selection.

Paste

Five basic Edit operations are available for pasting material from the Clipboard:

NOTE

NOTE

When you fill a selection with a texture, remember that an important difference exists between using Paste Into Selection and filling with a seamless pattern. When you use Paste Into Selection, the copied pattern stretches to fit the dimensions of the selected area. When you add a seamless pattern with the Flood Fill tool, however, the pattern tile maintains its original dimensions and repeats to fill the selection. Compare Figure 3.29 with Figure 3.28.

The text selection filled with the seamless tile by using Flood Fill.

The method you should choose in any given instance depends on the effect you want to produce.

Clear

Choosing E dit > C lear (the keyboard shortcut for which is the Delete key) is an operation that you might find quite useful.

On a flat image or Background layer, Clear replaces pixels with the current Background color set in the Color Palette. On a layer, Clear replaces pixels with transparency. If you want to replace all the pixels in a flat image or layer, make sure that either no selection is active or Select All is in effect, and then invoke Clear. Figure 3.30 shows an example of a text selection on a solid-white layer with all of the selection's pixels deleted with the Delete key, revealing the patterned layer underneath.

Figure 3.30. Using Clear to eliminate pixels in a selection on a layer.

This completes your preliminary look at selections. You'll return to the subject of selections in Chapter 5.

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