Ego Eram Reputo Posted May 4, 2014 Share Posted May 4, 2014 Confirmed. In 3.5.11 Left Mouse = opaque to transparent. Right Mouse = transparent to opaque. In 4.0.5226 Left AND Right = opaque to transparent. Also: You used to be able to swap the gradient direction by clicking on a nub. This doesn't work in 4.0.5226. ebook: Mastering Paint.NET | resources: Plugin Index | Stereogram Tut | proud supporter of Codelab plugins: EER's Plugin Pack | Planetoid | StickMan | WhichSymbol+ | Dr Scott's Markup Renderer | CSV Filetype | dwarf horde plugins: Plugin Browser | ShapeMaker Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pdnnoob Posted May 10, 2014 Share Posted May 10, 2014 To change to transparent to opaque, set your primary and secondary colors to transparent. No, Paint.NET is not spyware...but, installing it is an IQ test. ~BoltBait Blend modes are like the filling in your sandwich. It's the filling that can change your experience of the sandwich. ~Ego Eram Reputo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cc4FuzzyHuggles Posted May 10, 2014 Share Posted May 10, 2014 (edited) Ok, so... if I'm understanding correctly, for the radial gradient,Setting it to transparency mode with solid primary/secondary colors, makes it so the center is solid, right?While setting it to transparency mode, but changing the primary/secondary colors to Opacity Alpha 0, makes it so the center is transparent, is that correct?It seems a bit complicated vs just right clicking and left clicking. Oh well, at least we do still have ways to have both kinds of transparent radial gradients, which is good to know. Edited May 10, 2014 by Cc4FuzzyHuggles *~ Cc4FuzzyHuggles Gallery ~* Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Krakenn37 Posted May 20, 2014 Share Posted May 20, 2014 When Pasting a picture (2748 x 3712) in a new one (1600 x 1900 with 100 pixels/cm) with no change of the size of the destination file, when I resize the layer to have all I want visible, it crops the visible part. I can move the big picture but can't resize the layer without loosing as if it was crop. So it's impossible to use bigger picture in a smaller document without loosing a big part of the picture. I tryed the same manipulation with the same pictures (different tests with different resolutions) on the previous stable version of Paint.net, and it works perfectly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
II ARROWS Posted May 20, 2014 Share Posted May 20, 2014 You can do this to go around the problem: Paste the picture into a new image, where you can resize it. Then, paste the resized picture into the original image. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Krakenn37 Posted May 20, 2014 Share Posted May 20, 2014 @ II ARROWS : that's a good trick , but I guess that would be faster to be able to do all the manipulations IN the same document. I was able to adapt directly the size of each picture in a document with the previous version. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
II ARROWS Posted May 20, 2014 Share Posted May 20, 2014 Yes, I know.... I just suggested you a way to go around this until it's fixed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LWChris Posted May 24, 2014 Share Posted May 24, 2014 (edited) 1) I left my laptop unattended for a while and it went to hibernate (not standby). After I had rebooted the system, the whole canvas area (the picture as well as the gray surrounding area) remained white until I resized the paint.net window to force a full repaint of the UI. Not sure this is reproducible since it needs some time until my laptop goes into hibernate. I'd appreciate someone else trying this, too. 2) When you copy anything at the bottom or righthand border of an image and paste it, it will not be pasted where it was copied but with 1 pixel margin. Reproducible: always. Edited May 24, 2014 by LWChris Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
II ARROWS Posted May 24, 2014 Share Posted May 24, 2014 What is your operating system? You can also force to hibernate, it's possible that you have to enable the option from your menu, you can find the procedure online. There are 2 types of hibernation, classical and hybrid suspension. The second is just like normal stand by, but it also saves date on hard drive in case of power failure. You may need to enable that from power settings (advanced mode). What did you use? I tried both mode (I have enabled hybrid suspension and I've tried first without unplugging power cable, and the second unplugging it) but I've returned with the canvas still visible (I've pasted a screenshot, no levels or anything else). Windows 8.1. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tditdatdwt Posted May 25, 2014 Share Posted May 25, 2014 this is kinda annoying.. since i litterally have no idea how to explain it here's a video? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
II ARROWS Posted May 25, 2014 Share Posted May 25, 2014 Emh... When Pasting a picture (2748 x 3712) in a new one (1600 x 1900 with 100 pixels/cm) with no change of the size of the destination file, when I resize the layer to have all I want visible, it crops the visible part. I can move the big picture but can't resize the layer without loosing as if it was crop. So it's impossible to use bigger picture in a smaller document without loosing a big part of the picture. I tryed the same manipulation with the same pictures (different tests with different resolutions) on the previous stable version of Paint.net, and it works perfectly. It's 4 posts before your (with workaround!). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tditdatdwt Posted May 26, 2014 Share Posted May 26, 2014 (edited) Emh... It's 4 posts before your (with workaround!). ...i saw but they resized the layer and i didn't... and i knew that workaround before i saw your post... but it's stil very annoying Edited May 26, 2014 by tditdatdwt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rick Brewster Posted June 5, 2014 Author Share Posted June 5, 2014 Closing thread due to releasing new build ... The Paint.NET Blog: https://blog.getpaint.net/ Donations are always appreciated! https://www.getpaint.net/donate.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts