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Setting Up the Interface for Painting

In a typical paint session, you’ll be working with a number of compositing views. Most of the procedures in this chapter assume that the following views are open:

• The FxTree, where you get and connect paint operators and other compositing and effects operators.

• The Fx Viewer, where you preview the operators in the FxTree.

• The Fx Paint Brush List, which gives you access to all of the available paint brushes.

• The Fx Color Selector, where you pick the foreground and background paint colors.

• The Fx Operator Selector, where you choose operators to insert into the FxTree.

Some of these views can be displayed in viewports, and all of them are available from the View > Compositing menu in the main menu. Alternatively, you can use the compositing layout, which is described next.

Using the Compositing Layout

The compositing layout is one of XSI’s default layouts. It contains most of the tools you need to paint on images. Using this layout for painting is often more efficient than simply opening the required views in viewports, and is certainly preferable to opening them in floating views. In fact, when you use the compositing layout, the only floating views you need are the Fx color selector and a property editor.

 

To switch to the compositing layout

• From the main menu, choose View > Layouts > Compositing.

The Paint Menu

When you edit a paint operator’s properties, the paint menu is displayed in the Fx Viewer. The paint menu is where you access the majority of the paint tools and settings. It remains visible as long as you are editing a paint operator.

While the menu is displayed, you can preview other operators in the Fx viewer and the menu remains visible. This allows you to paint on raster paint clip or a vector paint operator while previewing how another operator affects what you’re painting.

As soon as you edit a non-paint operator’s properties, the paint menu disappears.

Paint Commands on Linux Systems

Several of the 2D paint commands and tools have keyboard shortcuts that use the Alt key. Many window managers used on Linux systems also require Alt. For Example, if you’re using Gnome and the Sawfish window manager, Alt+left-mouse-button is used to move windows around. When you’re painting in XSI, however, this key binding is used by the Stencil tool to subtract regions from the stencil.

To avoid this conflict, you can either install and use a different window manager or run XSI without a window manager. To do this:

• On the Red Hat log-in screen, choose Session > Failsafe and log in. An xterm opens where you can source and start XSI. See Starting XSI on Linux in the Setup & Licensing guide.

For more details, consult the documentation for your preferred window manager.

For more information about XSI and window management, see XSI and Window Management of the Setup & Licensing guide.



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