As a long time user of Photoshop, I've unfortunately gotten used to some of it's
features. I've since switched over to using the Gimp, but there are a few
things that I continue to miss:
I oftentimes find myself requiring a lot of precision when moving selections.
Ideally, I would use the arrow
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (2001-08-06 at 1343.02 +0800):
> Having said that, there are a couple of negative points to add (I
> haven't used Photoshop much at all, so these may not be as favourable to
> PS as I think): there seem to many more filters available for the Adobe
> product than the GIMP. Often,
On Mon, 6 Aug 2001 00:44:57 -0400, Tracer Bullet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>Hi GIMP users, new to professional, I have a burning question. I
>made a comment about how good I thought GIMP was as an art/paint
>program and got blasted by some folks saying it absolutely could not
>compete with the l
The offset dialog is not found under Image->Transforms->Offset,
but I believe the dialog box is about the same as in earlier
versions.
The real problem with gimp tutorials is that many of them date
back several years and refer to positively ancient versions of
the gimp. Most of these are sti
What you need in the internal help system printed out. But i'm not sure
how you do that.
If no one else posts here, ask [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Also check out grokking the gimp. it is a good guide for less
experienced users.
www.gimp-savvy.com or something like that.
_
I downloaded the (huge) Gimp User's Manual and have actually printed out
about half of it. But there is a problem. I use Gimp 1.2.1 and the Manual is
based on an earlier version. Menus have changed, and some of the recommended
command sequences no longer make any sense. For example the example