![]() Version 1.0 consisted of 36,000 lines of code and was written in fifteen weeks. ![]() originated as a computer science senior design project during spring 2004 at Washington State University. was originally created by Rick Brewster as a Washington State University student project, and has evolved from a simple replacement for the Microsoft Paint program into a program for editing mainly graphics, with support for plugins. (stylized as Paint.NET or ) is a freeware raster graphics editor program for Microsoft Windows, developed originally on. This is used to draw a number of predefined shapes. This tool is covered in detail in the Shapes Tool section.English, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Russian, Spanish, Turkish, Ukrainian, Catalan, Corsican, Thai Line/Curve Toolĭraw straight or curved lines on the active layer with this tool. More can be found on this tool in the Line/Curve Tool section. This tool places text on the active layer. Find out how to use the Text Tool in the Text Tool section. The Recolor Tool replaces one color with another. More information can be found in the Recolor Tool section. This tool is used to copy regions of pixels between different layers, or within the same layer.įor a detailed discussion on how to use this tool, visit the Clone Stamp Tool section. Use this tool to "pick up" a color from the active layer and set it as the current Primary or Secondary colors. See the Color Picker Tool section for more information on how this tool works. This tool allows editing of the active layer on a pixel-by-pixel basis. See the Pencil Tool section for more information on this tool. This tool is discussed in detail in the Eraser Tool section. EraserĪs the name suggests, this tool erases or removes areas of the image by setting the opacity, or alpha, of the pixels to 0. This tool is selected by default when starts. It is used to create stripes of color just like a paint filled brush would do, hence the name. This tool is covered in detail in the Paintbrush Tool section. The Gradient Tool allows the drawing of gradients (a gradual blend of one color to another). Several formats and shapes are supported. The Gradient Tool also has a transparency mode, which is useful to "fade" or "blend" two images together. The Gradient Tool is covered in detail in the Gradient Tool section. This tool fills areas of similar color with a different color. For more information on this tool, visit the Paint Bucket Tool section. This tool scrolls, or pans the image. This functionality is also usable from any other tool at any time: hold down the spacebar and then click and drag with the mouse.īoth these View Tools are covered in detail in the View Tools section. This tool is used to zoom in, zoom out, or expand the canvas around a particular region. You may use this to move or modify the selection outline without affecting any pixels in the image.īoth these Move Tools are covered in detail in the Move Tools section. This is used to move pixels that are in the layer or current selection. This tool is covered in detail in the Magic Wand Tool section. ![]() The Magic Wand Tool is used to select areas of the active layer that are similar in color. This tool makes elliptical or circular selections. To find out how to use this tool, see the Ellipse Selection Tool section. This tool is used to create a freeform selection region. For information on how this tool works, see the Lasso Selection Tool section. Use this tool to define a rectangular or square selection region. This tool is covered in detail in the Rectangle Selection Tool section. Hovering the mouse pointer over a tool icon shows a tool tip with the keyboard shortcut. ![]()
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