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Mastering CorelDRAW 9

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Making Things Permanent

This question of “how do I make DRAW remember” has become practically age-old. There are so many different aspects of the program that need a default condition, and at the same time, so many different ways to establish those defaults. It’s no wonder that DRAW users have always been confused about this. In fact, we’re glad that many pairs of eyes read this book before it’s published—otherwise, we might blow it ourselves!

First off, there are items that pertain to the interface, like the condition of palettes, dockers, and toolbars. Think of these as the toys in your childhood bedroom: if you leave them on the floor, they’ll stay on the floor until you pick them up and put them away. If your home had a housekeeper while you were growing up, then you’ll have to come up with another analogy—there are no housekeepers to put your toys away in DRAW.

Then there are elements that pertain to the drawings themselves, like styles, page size, bleed and page borders, units of measure, and the status of the rulers. The condition of these elements change with the wind: every time you open a new drawing, these conditions could change. Kind of like the mood of your older sister when she had to get ready for school and you were already in the bathroom—would she crawl back into bed, or break the door down? (What, separate bathrooms? Another useless analogy.)

While this second group of settings comes and goes with each drawing, there still must be default conditions which DRAW uses for new drawings, and so there must be a way for you to set them. Go to Tools Ø Options Ø Document, and click Save Options As Defaults for New Documents. DRAW offers seven general categories whose current condition you can save and use as defaults.

This subject surfaces most often when users want to change their default typefaces. That is governed by the styles, and they indeed are one of the seven categories that can be saved in this dialog.

This manner of saving is in sharp contrast to the main thrust of this chapter—namely, redesigning the interface and saving those changes in a workspace. If this confuses you, forget that you ever read this little digression—understanding workspaces is more important.

Creating Workspaces

Before you begin any significant remodeling of the CorelDRAW architecture, you should conscientiously create a place to store your work. Figure 34.2 shows the top page of the Workspace tab, including three workspaces supplied by Corel. The one labeled _default is the plain vanilla configuration that we all see the first time we start the program. The next is to help Illustrator defectors make the transition, and the third is for those who prefer the way DRAW 8 looked and felt. And then there is the one that we created to facilitate the writing and production of this book, and the large dot indicates that it is the default.


FIGURE 34.2  With a personal workspace, you are now ready to begin remodeling.

Most users never pay attention to this dialog and so they simply use _default (although “use” implies intent, and few users even know these workspaces are here). Any interface changes—even unintentional ones—get stored there.

While there is nothing dangerous about doing this, we recommend instead that you leave _default alone and create a workspace of your own. Even if you don’t expect to change the interface—even if you don’t know what we’re talking about!—go ahead and create a workspace for yourself. It’s easy—click New, supply a name, and click Set As Current. To switch between workspaces, just double-click them.


NOTE We like leaving _default pristine because that way you have a baseline reference for any changes you make, and for technical support purposes (should you ever need to seek assistance with the program), it’s good to know what the factory settings are and how to return to them. If, however, you have made substantial changes to _default, you can return to factory settings by holding F8 while starting DRAW.

Once you have created a home for your personal interface, you’re ready to begin building the interface.

Flying Tools

Let’s start with a basic technique that works with all of DRAW’s toolbars. Look closely at the toolbox. You’ll notice that it sits inside of a region—our term for this area that is defined by the edge of the screen on the left, the ruler on the right, and small lines at the top and bottom. Once you’re aware of this region, you’ll notice that the Standard toolbar, the property bar, and the color palette all have defined regions as well. Now do this:

1.  Move your cursor anywhere in the empty space around the toolbox, but still inside its region.
2.  Now click and drag out to the page. If you did it right, the entire toolbox will up and leave its home and switch to a floating horizontal toolbar.

The now-floating toolbox can be reshaped back to vertical or into a block, just by dragging its edges, and it can be moved anywhere on the Windows desktop. This “floating” of the toolbox is not new, and inquisitive users might have discovered this same capability as far back as DRAW 5. But the way it is done—by clicking and dragging on the region that defines it—is a key characteristic of the modern DRAW interface.

Playtime is not yet over; now try the following.

3.  Drag the toolbox to the right edge of the DRAW window. As you do, it should jump back to a vertical arrangement. Release the mouse, and it takes up residence (in Corel-speak, it “docks”) on that edge, beside the color palette.
4.  Drop the toolbox on top of the status bar, and it docks itself and creates a region just above the bar.
5.  Drop the toolbox on top of the Standard toolbar, and they appear to merge, as the toolbox docks itself to one side of the toolbar.

This basic drag-and-drop maneuver can also be used on the Standard toolbar, the property bar, the color palette, and any of the nine flyouts in the toolbox. You can pick them up, move them anywhere, and dock them on any of the four sides of the application. (The status bar can be moved to the top or the bottom of the screen, but not floated or docked on the sides.)


TIP Windows 95/98/NT sees a toolbar as a miniapplication and gives it a title bar and a Close button. If you close a toolbar, you can reopen it one of two ways: (1) by going to Window Ø Toolbars and checking it; or (2) by right-clicking on an existing toolbar, finding the desired toolbar on the list, and clicking it back on. To restore the color palette, go to Window Ø Color Palettes and choose the one you want.


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