I press tab and they all pop in or out of existence at once. So I have tab bound to toggle most of the interface elements. If you go into the keyboard shortcuts, you can add multiple actions to a single keypress by holding Ctrl/Cmd (I believe?). Neonnoodle wrote:Sorry to de-rail this thread yet further (or is it re-railing?) - but also, schwarzgrau, you can use the keyboard shortcuts' ability to have multiple bindings to simulate the single-tab fullscreen mode that Photoshop has. Numpad 0 hides the timeline, but what key hides the rest? By the way I like your new avatar, seems like a highly sophisticated duck Thank you for re/de-railing this thread neonnoodle, I tried it once, but I don't know which keys/functions that would be. With this point of view you ask why this single software is so expensive and it has nothing to do with want something for free or not appreciating someones work. Of course TVPaint is a great tool, if you getting used to it and none of the software in the MasterCollection can be used to do handdrawn animation (with Photoshop you can, but honestly it's a pain in the.
You can buy the whole CS6 Master Collection or for the same amount a software which still got it's quirks and an interface from 93. See yourself in th position of a customer, without your knowledge of the TVPaint team and their situation. Maybe I'm absolutely wrong Paul, but it sounds to me a bit like you projecting your anger about something else on fox's question (even if there are similarities). Now he feels the need to help these producers because apparently they don't realize that they can't ask for money without putting a single special effect in their movie and tells them "until you put some special effects into your movie that otherwise looks very good you can't expect me or anyone else to pay for it". Isn't this the same type of person who has become used to getting any movie, software or video game he wants for free and is upset when he comes across a movie he wants to see badly but can't find it on a pirate's forum? And when he sees the teaser of this movie he gets even more upset that he should pay for it because the teaser doesn't show a single explosion or lifelike monster like every good movie he has ever seen before?īut it doesn't end there. I am talking about the mentality of a person in a generic way now, a person who looks at all the software available to him and picks the one he can't afford and because he could afford all the other ones except for this one, he instantly assumes it is overpriced. If you like the software's top main menu on your Cintiq designate it as the main display.I really can't see it that way no matter how hard I try. It will nullify the workaround.Īs for using a Cintiq? For starters treat it like a regular display. When you close and reopen the software it should recall this multiple display workspace.ĭo not use Full Screen mode. Having done this, arrange your interior windows the way you like them. Do not allow the edge of the interface to touch the edge of the display.
When you spread out your workspace, stretch out the main interface window to fill all of your screens but leave 1/8" of space all the way around the border. With a Mac make sure you do not have "Mirror Displays" checked. You can manually spread out your workspace each time you use it but it does not remember the layout. However, what I know about using multiple displays will probably assist you in figuring out a way to deal with it. I do not have a Cintiq so I have nothing to offer that is specific to using one. I think you have a problem with Full Screen because TVPaint does not currently support multiple screens and this calls upon details that exemplify the singular display orientation in the code.