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Inkscape for mac lower object2/28/2023 ![]() Then you have to click on a stop to select it. You have to be using the Gradient tool first. You can also apply the hexcode automatically to gradients. You can if you want to, but you don't have to. You don't have to type any RGB or hexcode, in any place in Inkscape. ![]() I don't know anything about Adobe products, so I have no idea what you're comparing Inkscape to. The hexcode is automatically entered for you. Take the HSL tab, and click anywhere on the L bar. Anywhere you click inside the triangle in the center of the wheel, it will enter the hexcode automatically for you. In the Fill and Stroke dialog, depending on which tab you use, you can click in the various elements and the hexcode is automatically entered. On Adobe Fireworks or Photoshop for instance, it pops up an hexadecimal palette then you choose. When you edit the color, and choose the start and stop colors, it is a bit less user-friendly to type RGB. This issue touches more when you apply gradient colors. I am not saying to compete with commercial products, it will not make any sense in fact, but, I think all should folow the mostly the same path in terms of "user-friendliness".Īli2013 wrote:Exactly, the Fill and Stroke should have a hexadecimal palette. Well, there are many things to ameliorate. Take example of the canvas, it will be good if objects outside the document (canvas) are not included in the drawing. We are in 2012, people do things faster, we need to move faster, if you will have to pass many ways just to tackle something very small, it will be lame and lost of time. ![]() But, there are many things in terms of "user-friendly" that Inkscape must tackle! GIMP also goes the same. It is a bug for me because the "+" sign should be written and not zoom when writing text. Type something on an object, and type the "+" sign on your numpad, you will see it zooms. You can choose RGB as well.įor the text tool, I mean when you write. We're always here if you get stuck, but you might be able to get help faster, without waiting for us to replyĮxactly, the Fill and Stroke should have a hexadecimal palette. And relatively new in the manual, is an Index by menu, as well as an Index by tool, which I think are bothh very helpful for new users. I guess I forgot to mention it, but the info in my forum sig is all excellent for helping you learn how to use Inkscape. Or maybe I don't understand what you mean? Actually = and + is the key shortcut for zooming. I can type a plus without any problem, using Text tool. ![]() (I don't clearly understand what the CMYK tab actually does.) And then CMS is entirely different, but if you use a color managment, that's what you want.ĭo you mean that if you try to type a + in the hexcode area of the Fill and Stroke dialog, it zooms the canvas? Or do you mean using the Text tool? If you click on the canvas prior to typing, you should be able to type a +. There's a relatively new extension that can provide the CMYK model. Note that CMYK is NOT the CMYK print model. The Wheel is where you can click any color in the color triangle. Using the RBG tab, you can enter the RGB values themselves. Or in the Fill and Stroke dialog, you have a few choices for choosing color, without having to type the code. You can even make your own custom palette (look up Swatches in manual). Click that and a menu will pop up with many choices for palette. It's slightly above the scrollbar for the palette. If the Inkscape palette isn't the one shown, look for a tiny, left-pointing triangle arrow at the extreme right side of that palette. Do you see the palette across the bottom of the canvas? You can click on those colors, and the hexcode is automatically entered for you. ![]()
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