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Each time when I try to saving a picture by MS Paint, the default format is .png, but I want .jpeg, How can I set .jpeg as default format when saving pictures from MS Paint? I save pictures quite often, I don't want to change the format every time.
Take a look at this Windows Forum Post. What it does is create a quick access link that will default the Save File dialog to jpeg, you would then click this icon to save your file as jpeg.
From Link:
Open PAINT, then click the BLUE drop down box in the top left hand
corner of the screen (this is the box that gives the drop down options
for saving a file), now click SAVE AS and a selection of save as
formats including JPEG will appear to the right, move your cursor over
the JPEG option and RIGHT CLICK (not left click), three options will
be presented, click (select) the top option which says ADD TO QUICK
ACCESS FOLDER. This creates a new ICON at the top of the paint screen
next to the DO and UNDO arrows (icons).
In addition to the answer by mark-hall:
As the author zdd asked for a keyboard shortcut to save the file as jpeg, you can now use keyboard shortcut ALT + 4 (if the icon is at the 4th place).
there should be a better version too:
Create a blank jpg image and save it into a permanent folder somewhere
Right-click the image, select Properties and set it to Read-only
Search for Paint in the main Windows menu (not mspaint!!!)
Right-click on the Paint shortcut and select Properties
in the Target field, replace it with this line:
%windir%\system32\mspaint.exe "C:\Users\username\Documents\default1.jpg"
every time you want to save something as .jpg, search for Paint(not mspaint!!) in the main menu and you are good to go!
in addition, you can also add the JPG shortcut into the Paint quick access toolbar as described by others
Related
I have bought graphics from a graphics designer. He gave me a psd file with buttons and logos all in the same file. In the file there is a specific button I want to use for my project. How would I export only the button portion of the file to a png or jpeg?
using the eyeball toggle buttons on the right-hand panel, hide all elements you don't want
then go file > save as
give it a name and type of file you want to save as
What you can do in order to get just the single button or logo is something like what Miles said, but that might leave you with some extra blank space that you don't want.
Turn off all layers you don't want to save.
Select the crop tool and crop exactly what you want to save.
File - > Save for Web - > Select PNG or JPG and all other settings
Hope this helped!
here a little contribution :
calibrate your screen, check your color profile, turn you image in RGB mode or Grayscale (8 or 16 bit). ;)
Turn off layer you don't want to save, on windows shortcut "ALT+ left click" on layer eye you want to keep.
trim layer with menu/image/trim... Transparent Pixels
File / Save for Web / Select PNG-8 check transparency, click "Save..." choose a name and save button.
You can use shortcut for do it much more faster.
Of course you can make a Scripts in Scripts panel for repeat this action many times.
You can use free extension like cutandslice.me for export to different device in one shot.
Best wish.
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I am writing a user manual in Word that will be published to PDF for distribution to our customers. This document makes extensive use of cross-referencing by way of hyperlinks to bookmarks within the document – which generally works very well. Because this is quite a lengthy document, I have placed a link back to the top of the first 'contents' page in the footer section – with the page number printed on the same line at the opposite side of the footer.
However, I cannot get this link to work in the published PDF document. It looks blue and underlined like a normal hyperlink, but unlike the links in the body of the document, the cursor doesn't become a hyperlink pointer when I hover over it, and clicking on it has no effect.
Any advice on what I can do to solve this problem or work around it, please?
Okay, I've found a solution to this myself. I may as well share it here for anyone else who might come along later with a similar problem:
The trick is to insert a transparent picture, about the same width and height as the word you want to be hyperlinked. I've included one here that's suitable for the word 'Contents' in the font Tahoma 12pt. The size isn't really that important, though, as you can use Word's picture grip handles to resize it to your liking if necessary.
Obviously, it's all transparency so it's invisible, but right-click to the left of the white space above this text and you'll see it is indeed an image that can be saved.
Once you've saved the image, do the following:
Edit the footer and type in the text you want to link, formatting it in the 'Hyperlink' style if so desired.
Insert the picture into the footer – being careful not to click outside the picture until you're finished, as it's really difficult to select again if it gets deselected.
Right-click on it and set its text wrapping property to 'Behind Text'.
Right-click on it again and set its hyperlink property to point to the location you want.
Use the grip handles to position and size the picture so that it exactly covers the same area as your text.
Close the Header & Footer editing tool.
One last thing: unlike the other links to bookmarks in the finished PDF document, for some reason this one displayed a tooltip detailing the link location. The only way I could find to get rid of this was to go to "Office button | Word Options | Proofing | AutoCorrect Options… | AutoFormat" and uncheck the option "Internet and network paths with hyperlinks" under the "Replace" header.
Insert as a Cross-Reference in to the footer (not a hyperlink).
Use
References>Cross-reference
Then Select:
Reference Type 'Heading'
I struggled with this for nearly an hour, then inserted the Cross reference to the 'Heading' that I had created for Table of Contents. Create the PDF (don't print) and bingo.
I have also faced this situation, read all suggestions here, but did not find helpful.
I tried myself and solved my problem. Simple, do not make pdf through MS Word, just go to online pdf making sites and convert your doc to pdf.
In powerpoint 2010 I want to save an inserted textbox as a picture, which is simply done by right-clicking on the text box and save it. The saved image will however include a large amount of transparancy around the text. I am wondering whether this abundance of transparency around the text can be reduced, whithout using photo-editing programs.
I understand that powerpoint is not the right tool to use the beautifuly created texts for other purposes aside from office itself, however this would make things ten times easier for some coworkers of mine.
I hope someone can help me with this, also if it means using VBA or other (complex) codes/languages.
Thnx for your time.
Mike
Once you have typed your text in the textbox,
Copy the text box, right-click and paste as image
Now you have the image of the text box as you will get while saving that textbox as image - - using the save_as_image option
Select this image and click on format tab
You have an option to crop your image
Crop the image and save it as a picture
I have around 20 PSDs which I need to show to a few programmers. Is it possible to upload them somewhere where they can view them but not download?
Or only option is to convert all of them to JPGs one by one?
Thanks
You can use google docs to view .psd online. Upload it to docs.google.com, select the file to view, then before sharing click "File" and toggle "Prevent viewers from downloading"
Use Photoshop actions to batch convert many psd's to jpgs and upload the jpg's. If you fear that they can misuse jpg's too, add a watermark over your jpg images.
Pipeline to do this could be:
Window -> Actions
Open your PSD file
click, in Actions window, on the button in lower right corner "create new action"
Name your action
Click Record
Your actions are now being recorded.
Layer->Flatten image (take care now - not to accidentaly save your PSD as flattened!)
If it is an cmyk, convert it to rgb,if it has bleed, crop off the bleed part
Resize your image if needed image -> image resize
File -> save as...JPG
Close image
Stop recording action.
Now you can run that action on whole folder where your PSD-s resides:
File -> automate -> Batch
Choose your action, and chose your folder.
Choose your source folder... twaeak a little... and magic will start to happen!
We have a downloadable PDF file which looks great at 72% magnification in Adobe Reader and not so good at 101%. When downloaded and opened in the reader, its default magnification is 101%.
Is there a way to define the default magnification in the PDF file itself so that we ensure the best user experience?
Thank you!
If you can control the URL used to download, you can put parameters in the URL to control how the built-in reader will display the file.
For example, http://example.org/doc.pdf#zoom=50 will set the magnification to 50%.
See: https://www.evermap.com/AutoBookmark/Manual/OpenParameters.htm
The above applies to the built-in reader supplied by Adobe. Other readers may not honor the parameters. In particular, see the answer to this question regarding Chrome.
An example of how to define magnification when opening a file (regardless of the default one):
AcroRd32 /A "zoom=50=OpenActions" sh.pdf
First, this is a programming website, so you should identify a programming context. This question will probably be closed because it belongs on the soon to be launched serverfault.com
To set the default magnification, you need Adobe Acrobat Standard or Professional not Reader to have the ability to edit pdfs. Then when you open the document, click File | Properties. Click the Initial View tab and enter 72% in the magnification text box and click ok. Save your pdf and reopen it. It should default to 72% magnification when it is opened.
Note: I am unsure if other open source pdf editors provide this type of functionality.
Update: Standard doesn't work for saving magnifications.
For Adobe Standard, go to "Edit" then "Preferences."
When you click on the "Page Display" tab on the left, you'll see a panel with a field called "Zoom," where you can select a percentage from a drop-down menu.
If the above suggestions are not working it may be because the bookmarks can contain zoom instructions in their properties. To look at the bookmark properties select a bookmark in the bookmark panel and right click it to open properties. Choose actions. There should be a description of actions that will be applied when clicking on the bookmark.
The best solution I have found is that you can add a subsequent property for zoom instructions that will execute following the initial one, and set the page zoom to your specifications. To do this, select all of the bookmarks, right click to open properties, then actions, then choose the add function. After choosing add, find the zoom instruction that is the best fit for what you are looking for.
If you want to edit the initial zoom instruction through the edit function in bookmark properties on all bookmarks, you cannot select all, because, although the zoom will be set correctly, every bookmark will be set to one bookmark page. If you wish to edit the properties this way you must edit each, one by one.