How to see rectangular marquee selected area size without cropping it ? in photoshop cs 5 - photoshop

How can i see rectangular marquee selected area size without cropping it ? It is very easy in paint.net but i have to do in photoshop cs 5. While selecting an area i should be able to see the dimensions of selected area. How can i do that ?
Also when i select an area with rectangular marquee i want to see the position of that area or at least i need to be able to see a pixel position. Position means its position in the image like top 55px left 45px thank you.
Adobe Photoshop CS 5

The cursor position and selection size are shown in the Info window (F8, in the upper right in my workspace).

Edit -> Preferences -> Units & Rulers... -> Set Rulers to Pixels

Related

Remove selected color from image (grayscale graphic)

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Hi guys! I have the following task: I must paint the black and white house, leaning to a result as the colored one.
I figured out, there must be a way to somehow "remove" the white color, so there is only the black outlines left. From there I will make an underlayer and will insert color/materials etc.
The hard part and the essential in my question is: The black outlines are ranging from true black to very light grey. Is there a way I can somehow delete all white (0,0,0) pixels and for the others: the more "black" they have, the more opacity they get. So a grey pixel with a value around (126,126,126) will be left, but with a 50% opacity.
have you tried, copying the same image on top of the original image, change the copied image blending mode to overlay, use the select tool on the white area, and then click the select tab on top menu, from that tab click select similar,so you have all the white area selected, then select the original layer, and then erase, you can also erase delete the copied image. Good Luck!
Yes you can,
Open "Select" menu and choose "Color Range", it will open a dialog box, inside that box you can choose from the drop down at the top if you want to select Reds, Yellows, Greens, etc. or you can select Sampled Colors with the eyedropper tool, so you can select the white color from anywhere at the image then you can handle the color range sensitivity from the slide bar called Fuzziness, the lower number is the lower range of white color and vise versa :)
As Ahmed Alaa said, use the "Color Range" tool, but for coloring in black and white images, see if my Youtube tutorial can help.
-https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4My4dVU5iUE
P.S. Sorry this post is bad, i'm new-ish.

Resize height of picture and extend width

i have some picture which is 675x503. I would like to make more width on it and let's say to 1024 and in height to 400. How to do that without cutting my image and keep quality? I just would like to have this image on my website top. I got photoshop 6. I tried with Image->image size but its not what i need.
If you don't want to cut the picture at all, this will distort the image due to different height and width ratios. If this is not an issue, you could simply hit ctrl(or cmd)+t when the layer with the picture is selected. It will let you resize and rotate the entire image. There is also an option in the Image -> Image Size menu called "Bicubic Sharper", found in the drop-down list at the bottom of the menu(Photoshop CS6). It's meant for image reduction and should also solve your problem.

how can I transform size of svg with svg-edit

Is it possible to change the size of an existing svg using svg edit? I https://code.google.com/p/svg-edit/ I have a rather large svg that I wish to scale down. Google's tool doesn't have an icon (that I can see) to scale the size
Scaling an entire SVG document isn't really supported as a button press or anything but it can be accomplished.
Open your project into SVG-Edit, select everything (press A on your keyboard) then right click and choose Group. Then go to Menu > Document Properties and enter your new dimensions. Then select your SVG content and move it onto your new small canvas. Easiest way is to use the X and Y coordinates in the top grey bar (enter 0 for both). Then just resize the whole document as needed by dragging the small circles located on the corners of your content. Hold the shift key on your keyboard to scale proportionately.

x and y coordinates of mouse location in Photoshop

How do I turn on the X and Y coordinates for the location of the mouse on screen?
I have Photoshop CC. I'm creating interfaces and would like to be able to know the location of my mouse.
Although I can't currently check as i don't have photoshop CC on this computer, from past experience if you go
Window -> Information
A palette should appear with the coordinates of the cursor in it.
Press F8 to open info palette. That will show your mouse position in x and y coordinates.
You can also press Ctrl + R to view the ruler. Then take the mouse to the top left corner and by dragging from there you can change 0,0 coordinates of x,y position to anywhere on canvas.
when you draw something like rectangle and draw with pressing space bar. It will show lively width height and x y coordinates as well in Photoshop CC
Position with guides and the grid
Guides and the grid help you position images or elements precisely. Guides appear as nonprinting lines that float over the image. You can move and remove guides. You can also lock them so that you don’t move them by accident.
Smart Guides help you align shapes, slices, and selections. They appear automatically when you draw a shape or create a selection or slide. You can hide Smart Guides if you need to.
The grid is useful for laying out elements symmetrically. The grid appears by default as nonprinting lines but can also be displayed as dots.
Guides and grids behave in similar ways:
Selections, selection borders, and tools snap to a guide or the grid when dragged within 8 screen (not image) pixels. Guides also snap to the grid when moved. You can turn this feature on and off.
Guide spacing, along with guide and grid visibility and snapping, is specific to an image.
Grid spacing, along with guide and grid color and style, is the same for all images.
Show or hide a grid, guides, or smart guides
Do one of the following:
Choose View > Show > Grid.
Choose View > Show > Guides.
Choose View > Show > Smart Guides.
Choose View > Extras. This command also shows or hides layer edges, selection edges, target paths, and slices.
Place a guide
If the rulers are not visible, choose View > Rulers.
Note:
For the most accurate readings, view the image at 100% magnification or use the Info panel.
Do one of the following to create a guide:
Choose View > New Guide. In the dialog box, select Horizontal or Vertical orientation, enter a position, and click OK.
Drag from the horizontal ruler to create a horizontal guide.
Drag to create a horizontal guide
Dragging to create a horizontal guide
Hold down Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS), and drag from the vertical ruler to create a horizontal guide.
Drag from the vertical ruler to create a vertical guide.
Hold down Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS), and drag from the horizontal ruler to create a vertical guide.
Hold down Shift and drag from the horizontal or vertical ruler to create a guide that snaps to the ruler ticks. The pointer changes to a double-headed arrow when you drag a guide.
(Optional) If you want to lock all guides, choose View > Lock Guides.
Move a guide
Select the Move tool , or hold down Ctrl (Windows) or Command (Mac OS) to activate the Move tool.
Position the pointer over the guide (the pointer turns into a double-headed arrow).
Move the guide in any of the following ways:
Drag the guide to move it.
Change the guide from horizontal to vertical, or vice versa, by holding down Alt (Windows) or Option (Mac OS) as you click or drag the guide.
Align the guide with the ruler ticks by holding down Shift as you drag the guide. The guide snaps to the grid if the grid is visible and View > Snap To > Grid is selected.
Remove guides from the image
Do one of the following:
To remove a single guide, drag the guide outside the image window.
To remove all guides, choose View > Clear Guides.
Set guide and grid preferences
Do one of the following:
(Windows) Choose Edit > Preferences > Guides, Grid, & Slices.
(Mac OS) Choose Photoshop > Preferences > Guides, Grid, & Slices.
For Color, choose a color for the guides, the grid, or both. If you choose Custom, click the color box, choose a color, and click OK.
For Style, choose a display option for guides or the grid, or both.
For Gridline Every, enter a value for the grid spacing. For Subdivisions, enter a value by which to subdivide the grid.
If desired, change the units for this option. The Percent option creates a grid that divides the image into even sections. For example, choosing 25 for the Percent option creates an evenly divided 4‑by‑4 grid.
Click OK.
To the top
Work efficiently with Smart Guides
Smart Guides come in handy in several scenarios, such as the following:
Option (Mac)/Alt (Win) + Drag a Layer: When you drag a layer while keeping the Option (Mac) or Alt (Windows) key pressed, Photoshop displays reference measurement guides showing the distance between the original layer and the duplicate layer. This feature works with both the Move and Path Selection tools.
Distance between the layers: original and duplicate
Distance between the layers: original and duplicate
Path measurements: Photoshop displays measurement guides while you're working with paths. Measurement guides are also displayed when you select the Path Selection tool and then drag a path within the same layer.
Path measurements
Path measurements
Matched Spacing: When you duplicate or move an object, Photoshop displays measurement guides to visually indicate spacing between other objects that match the spacing between the selected object and its immediate neighbors.
Cmd (Mac)/Ctrl (Win) + Hover Over a Layer: You can view measurement guides while working with layers. With one layer selected, hover over another layer with the Cmd (Mac) or Ctrl (Windows) key pressed. You can use arrow keys in conjunction with this feature to nudge the selected layer.
Measurement guides while working with layers
Measurement guides while working with layers
Distances from the canvas: When you hold down the Cmd (Mac) or Ctrl (Windows) key while hovering outside a shape, Photoshop displays distances from the canvas.
Distances of a shape from the canvas
Distances of a shape from the canvas
Spacing between matched objects

photoshop make selection by coords

In Adobe Photoshop, having rectangle coords, how do I make selection box in my image?
For instance, I have x = 100, y = 200, w = 80, h = 40.
Is there any way to specify these coords in some edit boxes and get marching ants selection?
You'll need to make 4 guides at these locations (have the 'info' viewport open).
To make a guide, have the ruler (ctrl+r) viewing, use something like the Move tool (V), and click on the ruler and drag outwards to the page. A thin blue line (guide) will come up. Drag this to one of the edges of the box you are needing (you might need to zoom in to get fine control).
Click and drag from the left ruler for a vertical guide, and from the top ruler for a horizontal guide (or hold down ALT key to change it, when clicking + holding).
After these are setup, you can use the rectangular marquee tool (M) to do your selection. It will snap to the guides.