On 27/02/16 16:17, gimp-users.mbou...@spamgourmet.com wrote:
Ofnuts wrote:
You have a a very valid point however, getting a circle/ellipse
selection to overlap an existing circle/ellipse is not very easy;
framing it with a rectangle selection and then getting the
circle/ellipse that fits the rec
Ofnuts wrote:
You have a a very valid point however, getting a circle/ellipse
selection to overlap an existing circle/ellipse is not very easy;
framing it with a rectangle selection and then getting the
circle/ellipse that fits the rectangle would often be easier.
In GIMP 2.8.10 on Windows, the
On Fri, Feb 26, 2016, at 05:04 PM, Ofnuts wrote:
> On 26/02/16 18:59, akovia wrote:
> > Just curious if there was any way to bypass or modify the "Selection to
> > Path Advanced Settings" algorithms when working with the Ellipse
> > Selection Tool? A simple circle or ellipse produces a path with
On 26/02/16 18:59, akovia wrote:
Just curious if there was any way to bypass or modify the "Selection to
Path Advanced Settings" algorithms when working with the Ellipse
Selection Tool? A simple circle or ellipse produces a path with so many
unnecessary and non symmetric nodes that it makes it pr
Just curious if there was any way to bypass or modify the "Selection to
Path Advanced Settings" algorithms when working with the Ellipse
Selection Tool? A simple circle or ellipse produces a path with so many
unnecessary and non symmetric nodes that it makes it pretty useless. A
square selection wi