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Lost grid

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Lost grid Donald Miller 28 Oct 22:27
  Lost grid Liam R E Quin 28 Oct 22:36
Lost grid Liam R E Quin 28 Oct 23:10
Donald Miller
2012-10-28 22:27:29 UTC (about 12 years ago)

Lost grid

Hello Gimp-user-list

I used grid on one file, made a new file, defaulted to no grid. 'Show grid' did not show grid. Alt-f4, restart, still no visible grid. Config had been changed to zero size. I reset to 0.1 inch, still no grid. Have not tried reboot.

Regards, Don Miller damiller2@gmail.com

Liam R E Quin
2012-10-28 22:36:16 UTC (about 12 years ago)

Lost grid

On Sun, 2012-10-28 at 16:27 -0600, Donald Miller wrote:

I used grid on one file, made a new file, defaulted to no grid. 'Show grid' did not show grid.

Here, I did the following in a new file: (1) image->configure grid
changed grid size to every 100 pixels (was every 10 pixels but my images are too large for that to be usable) left uncanged the offset of 0
(2) view->show grid
and got a grid of black lines.

If you are not careful you can end up with a grid of white lines, which won't be very visible in a new image with a white background.

Alt-f4, restart, still no visible grid.

Don't know about alt-f4, that depends which Linux window manager you use. In some, it will quit the application. Is that what you mean?

Config had been changed to zero size.

Which config, where, exactly? Do you mean "Spacing" in Configure Image grid", or do you mean "Offset" (which is supposed to be 0)?

Use Pixels for a measurement - inches are for photoshop users :-) and are pretty much meaningless.

You won't see a grid in any case until you use view->show grid (by which I mean "Show Grid" from the image's View menu, either at the top of the image window or by right-clicking in the image).

If you want the grid by default, go to Edit->Preferences, select "Appearance" under Image Windows, and check the "Show grid" box. Then press OK. If you want to change the default grid, that's in edit/preferences too, BUT it won't affect any open images, and probably won't affect images you already saved as .xcf or .xcf.gz or whatever, as I think the grid state is stored along with the image (I didn't check, though)

Liam

Liam R E Quin
2012-10-28 23:10:38 UTC (about 12 years ago)

Lost grid

On Sun, 2012-10-28 at 16:56 -0600, Donald Miller wrote:

Ok, got a grid of a light color.

I think it defaults to the toolbox colours when you configure it.

[...]

Use Pixels for a measurement - inches are for photoshop users :-) and are pretty much meaningless.

Actually, some of us print results to the real world, need in/mm.

The dpi setting isn't really meaningful except for some applications to guess the size at which to print, but even there it's not reliable and often not what you want. It's generally best to ignore it completely, *except* in a PhotoShop-based workflow.

One of the problems is that PhotoShop users often think "pixel" is a measurement, whereas the same 3,000 pixel wide image could print 10 inches wide or 1 inch wide or larger or smaller or anywhere between, and the "best" size depends on the actual printer, the paper and ink, and what you're tring to do.

I like to switch [grid] on and off, to help layouts. Not sure yet what I want for default. Suppose I could set in templates.

Best might be to configure a keybinding to turn the grid off and on.

PS: Don't forget to copy the list in your replies so people know you got sorted out :-)

Liam