CorelDRAW
9s Interface
Yes, another menu reorganization, and while that might anger some veteran
users, this one doesnt seem as gratuitous as ones in versions past.
Many familiar menu items have been moved (and in some cases removed)
from the default interface, and it feels like there is a method to the
madness. Most of us on the writing team became comfortable with the new
layout quickly. If you dont, rest assured there is a DRAW 8 workspace
that you can activate.
Here are some of the more notable interface changes.
Roll-Ups Are History
The transition is completethere are no more roll-ups in CorelDRAW.
They either have been transformed into dockers or, in the case of most
special effects, have been replaced with interactive tools with increased
property bar functionality. If you became attached to roll-ups, the dockers
can be individually torn off, resized, and rolled up.
More Logical Keystrokes
Corel has taken steps to bring the programs shortcuts more in line
with other programs in the box, with the Macintosh version, and with Windows
norms. For instance, Ctrl+A has been reassigned to Select All, and
(finally!) Ctrl+E is Export, not Extrude.
As always, this all can be customized, but now the starting point is
closer to what new users are likely to expect, based on their experiences
with other programs.
Cleaner Property Bars
In DRAW 9, property bars play a greatly increased rolefor many
of the tools, that is now the only place to go to adjust settings. Happily,
many of the property bars have been streamlined so that they take up less
space and allow for extensive customization. Pop-up sliders and text alignment
drop-downs are two specific examples. These new buttons are at least 50
percent smaller than their previous incarnations.
Smarter Guidelines
As in DRAW 8, guidelines are treated as objects; however, now any guideline
(or group of guidelines) can have its own custom colors. Select a guideline
and right-click on a color swatch to change the color of the selected
guideline or drag a color from an on-screen palette. Figure 2.13 shows
how helpful this can be. The left guideline is perfectly visible where
you dont need it to bei.e., in the blank spacebut useless
in the drawing, thanks to the dark background. But the right guideline
has been colored yellow and is perfectly visible against the background.
You can Shift+select multiple guidelines to change their colors at
once.
FIGURE
2.13 Guideline color is no longer an all-or-nothing
propositionyou can color them individually.
Furthermore, you can now create guidelines according to a number of presets,
such as page borders, defined bleed area, inset margins, and others, as
shown here.

Guidelines have earned their own property bar, so you can make many basic
changes to them instantly.
From Camera to DRAW
If youre tired of playing the software shuffle with your digital
camera, youll love DRAW 9s new Digital Camera Interface. With
this new import feature, you can snap away and have images flow directly
into DRAW or PAINT, without the need for any software to convert a proprietary
image format. For regular users of digital photography, this could be
the most significant development in DRAW 9.
Page Layout
and Setup
DRAW 9 can now be started emptyin other words, without
a new graphic open. We thought this was kind of a yawner, until we remembered
all the times we were presented with a blank drawing when we had no intention
of doing anything with it, proceeding instead to the File Ø
Open dialog.
Multiple page sizes are now allowed within one document file. This will
be convenient for users who want to create, for example, corporate identities
(letterhead, business cards, envelopes) and keep the items together in
the same file. The letterhead page can be portrait, the envelope page
landscape, and the business card page a label.
There is still no auto page numbering tool, although the Corel SCRIPT
language now includes commands that will allow more elegant scripting
for this function. See Chapter 33 for a step-by-step tutorial on creating
this script.
Better Palette
Control
The biggest news on this front is your ability to open more than one
on-screen palette. Figure 2.14 shows four distinct color palettes openthe
default palette, a browser palette, a Pantone palette, and the TruMatch
palette. Youll want a large monitor before you get carried away,
however...
Each palette is controlled individually and can be torn off, resized,
and relocated. Colors can be dragged from the palettes and applied to
objects as fills and outlines. You can also drag colors between nonfixed
palettes to quickly create personalized palettes. This is much faster
than going through the dialogs. In addition, you can now drag colors between
nonfixed palettes to create the most customized palette ever!
The Palette Editor has been streamlined and should now be less confusing
and frustrating for both new and experienced DRAW users alike. At least
thats the theory, but there is controversy among beta testers. I
find the Palette Editor has taken 10 giant steps backward, argues
Debbie Cook, a prominent tester and member of our writing team. Its
way too big, wastes too much space, and you cant even pick or edit
colors directly from this dialog. Why not just add the Palette Editor
as a new tab at the back of the Color dialog? In addition, its far
too easy to overwrite fixed palettes by just saving over them. I know.
I tried it.
Finally, there is now support for the Pantone metallic and pastel spot
color palettes using the standard naming conventions (CVC, CVU). In addition,
the HKS model has been added as additional support for European artists.
FIGURE
2.14 If youre willing to part with the
screen space, you can keep as many palettes open as you want.
New Tools,
New Functionality
Lots of little changes were made to existing effects and tools. Here
is a laundry list, in general order of perceived importance.
The Return of PowerLines
Corel has been listening to those users wishing for the return of PowerLines.
The Natural Pen tool has been renamed the Artistic Media tool and has
been given increased functionality and options. Strokes are created with
a much more manageable number of control points/nodes. They can be edited
after being drawn, including curve direction and width. And they can be
applied to existing lines and strokesjust like a powerline. Furthermore,
pressure strokes really work now, even with a mouse (hold Up while drawing
for more pressure, Down for less).
The Artistic Media tool offers custom brushes that you can make from
any vector or bitmap objects. There is also a Spray mode, which makes
Figure 2.15 simple to create. Speed and feel are both excellent.
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