PHOTOBARS 7.0 IMPORTANT NOTE: Installation of PhotoBars 7.0 requires that the user first have installed the current PhotoTools 3.0.6 update, which can be confirmed by checking the file properties of the PhotoTools 3.0.6 installer and verifying that the file version is "4.x"; the older release was "2.x". Before downloading and installing PhotoBars 7.0, PLEASE ensure you have PhotoTools 3.0.6 installed and working properly. If PhotoTools does not work, please verify the installed files against those listed here. Some users have experienced problems on Windows 98 and Windows 98SE, but they were resolved by downloading the current update of PhotoTools 3.0.6. Once you are confident PhotoTools is working, then PhotoBars 7.0 should work as well. If all efforts fail, please contact me and I will do what I can to help. PHOTOBARS 7.0 INTRODUCTION The illustration below (shown actual size for readability) shows all toolbar buttons for Photoshop 7.0/PhotoBars 7.0. Each primary menu and submenu has had a new menu toolbar created for it. If the user frequently accesses any particular menu, this will provide them a quick way for enabling a toolbar representation of it. Included in PhotoBars 7.0 are two of my own customized toolbars that are shown docked at the top and left of the Photoshop window. A third toolbar, shown floating in the Photoshop 7.0 window, combines some of the buttons of the first two toolbars into a single toolbar which may be preferred by some users. Of course, all toolbars are customizable and may be enabled or disabled as desired. Specific customizations that a user will need to perform on the Photobars 7.0 supplement are as follows: 1. Jump To Menu - The Jump To Menu category and toolbar provide a list of graphics applications that are governed by shortcuts which the user creates in the Adobe\Photoshop 7.0\Helpers\Jump To Graphics Editor directory. Based upon the shortcuts placed in that directory, the Jump To Menu will change in content and thus the mapping of the Jump To Menu Toolbar buttons will also change. For convenience, the Jump To Menu button category provides unique button icons for various Adobe and Macromedia products that may be among those installed on a user's computer. 2. Import Menu - As import devices vary among users, the contents of the Import Menu will reflect only those scanning devices installed on the user's computer system. Generic icons have been provided for digital camera import, flatbed scanner import, film scanner import, etc., that the user may redefine specifically for their devices and the Import Menu order of the acquire modules.
3. Filter Menu - The Filter Menu provides both canned Adobe
filters included with Photoshop as well as 3rd party filters purchased and
installed by the user. The Filter Menu category provides some buttons
for some popular Photoshop plug-in filters, but these or other new buttons
must be defined as needed, based upon the order in which they are shown in
the Filter Menu. |
PhotoBars 7.0 for Photoshop 7.0
I've received a few questions about how to edit the toolbar buttons. The following is a brief description: With the toolbar floating and the Customize Toolbars menu open, open the Icon Button Editor by a CTRL-ALT-DOUBLECLICK on the button icon of interest. Revise the menu command type appropriate to the command's new position in the Photoshop menu structure. Menus number left to right, starting with the FILE menu as menu 0. Menu items number top to bottom, with the topmost item/submenu being numbered 0. Separator bars are also counted as an item. When creating a menu button, the item number is -1 and when creating a single item button, the submenu is -1.
Currently displayed toolbars can be directly edited without going through the Customize Toolbars dialog, by CTRL-ALT-DOUBLECLICKING directly on the toolbar button. Note that the toolbar must be floating for this to work. Docked toolbars cannot be edited. Also, to shift buttons around on toolbars, just hold down ALT while selecting and dragging the button icon to the desired location. Dragging it off the toolbar will delete the button. Dragging an icon just a few pixels away from another will create a space between them. Note that if you edit a button from one of the Customize Toolbars categories and that button has already been used on a toolbar, the new edits are not mapped to the toolbar. Instead, it will be necessary to drag the revised button onto the toolbar and to delete the previously used button. Alternatively, you can directly edit the button on the toolbar in the same manner as that edited in the Customize Toolbars category. Just Ctrl-Alt-Doubleclick on the toolbar button itself to open the Icon Button Editor. To make a new icon graphic, create an image that is 19 pixels wide by 17 pixels high, not exceeding 16 colors in depth. Copy that image to place it on the clipboard and then enter the Icon Button Editor. Click on the button icon in the Icon Button Editor to paste the clipboard image as the new icon. When using Photoshop to edit a new icon graphic, I commonly saw the graphic get corrupted in the paste, as if it were shifted to the right by about 5 pixels and with that 5 pixel area filled in white. However, by saving the graphic as a 4-bit BMP file, opening the file in Paint, selecting and copying the graphic, and then performing a paste into the Icon Button Editor, I was successful in creating new icons. For the existing toolbars I've created, these may certainly be further customized by the user as desired, by adding and/or deleting buttons. However, a button on one toolbar cannot be dragged onto another. So, the toolbars cannot be used to build additional toolbars; this requires using drag and drop of icons from the Customize Toolbars categories. I hope that makes sense. QUESTIONS?? First, please read the list of Limitations
CREATING A PHOTOBARS BACKUP Saving a backup copy of the PhotoBars CS by burning a copy of the files to a CD-R is discouraged. The preferred approach is to burn the original self-extracting zip file and password to a CD or, recompress the extracted files as a new zip file without a password, and burn that to a CD. The same approach is also recommended for making a backup of the user’s own customizations. Use of a zip file in this manner preserves the file attributes so that when the files are extracted to a hard drive, they are ready for error-free use. Otherwise, if the extracted files are burned to a CD and later restored to a hard drive, the user must ensure the read-only attribute is cleared for all files so as to prevent errors in the use of PhotoBars.
Thank you for your interest in the PhotoBars 7.0 Supplement! Please contact me if you have any questions or problems. AMBRESS
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