Everyone likes
pictures. They perk up a page of dull text and make it bearable. (Hmm. Like this one?) Plus, some things just can't be expressed as well in words.
Are picture files different from text files? Not really. Both are sets of 1's and 0's stored on the computer. The biggest difference is that image files are often quite large. The file name extensions are different for image files, of course.
You have the same kinds of tasks to learn that you had for text files. Create a new document, save it, edit it, save it again, print it. So, in this section you will review or see another way to do the tasks you have already learned. Plus you get to play with Microsoft Paint. Be careful not to neglect your other work! Paint can be addicting, even if you are not artistic!!
Paint is a simple program with basic tools for creating bitmap pictures. That means that you define the color of each little dot, called a pixel, in the image. In the hands of a patient person, however, Paint can be used to create some spectacular images. It would be a lot easier in one of the advanced graphics programs!
Paint will be used in other lessons to save screenshots of your work. This enables you to submit pictures to your instructor about things that don't produce a document to print. Outside the classroom, Paint is useful when dealing with tech support. You can capture a picture of an error message or a glitch in behavior that will show tech support exactly what you are dealing with. Powerful!
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Step-by-Step: Create & Save Image |
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Start with:
What you will learn: | to open a program from Windows Search to resize the canvas in Paint to create a text image with Paint to save an image |
Search can find a program faster than digging down through the All Apps list.
Type the letter p.
The Results list shows and changes as you type to show objects on the computer whose names start with
the letter p. Programs (apps) are listed first.
The illustration shows Paint at the top as a 'Best match'. Then the results show groups for Apps, Settings, and Search suggestions. Other groups that might appear include Folders, and Documents.
Problem: Paint is not showing in the list
Sometimes Search is too "smart" for its own good. If you have several
programs that start with "p" that you use more often than Paint, they may show up in the Search
list and Paint may not show at first.
Solution: Keep typing. By the time you get the whole word typed in, Search will have found the program. Keep this behavior in mind when you are looking for other programs or files.
Example: Corel PaintShopPro
The graphics program that I use the most, PaintShopPro, did not show in this initial list. It did show after I typed the first two letters, pa. The offical name is Corel PaintShopPro. The program appeared as a Best match when I typed a c instead of a p!
For experience, let's see what happens if you type more letters.
Slowly type the whole word paint in the Search
box.
As you type each letter, watch how the results list changes.
The program Paint is still in the list. You may see other programs or files that have the word paint in the name or as part of the attributes.
Remember that Windows 10 divides the results into different categories.
In the Search box, type the word mspaint.
As you type, watch the changes in the list.
There may be no matches at all when you have only typed a few characters,
depending on what documents and programs you have on your computer.
After typing 'msp', my Windows 10 computer showed Paint and Publisher 2016. Unexpectedly, there are no files listed in the results, not even mspaint.exe. That file is what starts Paint. Windows does show the app Paint.
Click on the Desktop to close the search results.
Paint is still open from your earlier work.
Paint remembers the size of the last picture you worked with. If the canvas size is too small or too large to work with comfortably, you can resize it. You are going to be typing in your name in a large font size. How large a canvas you will need will depend on how long your name is!
Problem: Cannot see the bottom and far right edge handles
The canvas is larger than the window.
Solution: Drag the Zoom slide on the Status bar to reduce the size in the window until you can see the handles.
Resize the white canvas by dragging the
tiny handle
at the bottom right corner of the canvas to make the
drawing area the size that you want to work in.
Alternate method: Set the dimensions
File > Properties > set pixel sizes for width and height.
Move your pointer to the white canvas and drag from the upper left of
the canvas. A box of dashed lines (a marquee) will appear. Your text will go inside this box shortly.
Release the mouse button.
A new ribbon tab, Text Tools: Text, appears on the ribbon.
Your pointer turns to a vertical line cursor to show where your typing will appear.
Type your name in the marquee box.
The marquee box can enlarge down as you type, as far as the edge of the canvas, but it will not get any wider automatically. What won't fit on the canvas will be chopped off after you click outside the selection box.
Text converts to picture: As long as you don't click outside the box, you
can edit what you type by selecting, backspacing, and deleting. BUT...once you click
outside the box, the text becomes part of the picture. Then you make any
changes only with graphics methods like erasing. No more backspacing and
deleting!
Problem: Name
does not fit on canvas
Solution: Enlarge the canvas by dragging the
handles.
You can use the Zoom slider to see the canvas edges.
Problem: Name
does not fit neatly in marquee box
When a marquee box automatically gets taller, some letters of a word may be on different lines.
Solution: Drag the handles of
the marquee box
wider.
If your name still won't fit, you may need to enlarge the canvas (see solution above) and start over with a new box. Clear the canvas using > , and press the DELETE key. You are back to a blank canvas. Enlarge the canvas as necessary. Then drag a larger box, and try again.
Unavailable commands:
Observe the
Clipboard section of the Text Tools ribbon at the far left.
It contains buttons for the
most common commands: Cut, Copy, Paste.
They are gray because they are not available at the moment. Something must be selected before you can copy or cut. Something must be copied or cut before you can paste.
Undo and Redo
are arrow buttons at the top of the window in the Quick Access toolbar.
Key combos:
Undo = CTRL + Z reverses your last action.
Redo = CTRL + Y reverses your last Undo.
Cut
= CTRL + X removes the selection and copies it to the
Windows Clipboard
Copy = CTRL + C copies the
selection to the Windows Clipboard and leaves the selection in place
Paste = CTRL + V
places whatever was on the Windows Clipboard at the cursor's location
Many applications use CTRL + Z for Undo and CTRL + Y for Redo/Repeat. These
are a
particularly useful key combos to learn to use. It is MUCH faster to
execute menu commands from the keyboard, so watch for the ones that execute
the commands you use a lot. Undo certainly gets a lot of work!
Undo limits: Paint will allow you to undo up some large number of actions. I stopped counting at 48. In older versions of Windows there were far fewer steps in the Undo history list.
Some programs only remember the last action. Others allow you to select how many steps to remember. Sometimes there is a question about what a program counts as an "action". Selecting is usually an action. Clicking the mouse somewhere is usually an action, too.
No visible Undo list: Since Paint does not
keep a visible list of what actions it is remembering, it is easy to get
confused when going back and forth between Undo and Redo.
Save you new color to the palette by clicking on Add
to Custom Colors.
The new color is now the color of Color 1 or Color 2, whichever was selected.
If you want to save additional custom colors, first click on an empty Custom color square in the dialog. Then create the color and add it to the palette. Otherwise a new custom color will replace an existing custom color.
Use your custom color in your picture somewhere.
Experiment: Other Tools
Try out the rest of Paint's tools - Fill, Shapes, Lines, Eraser.
Change the colors for fil and border and lines. Remember that Color 2 is for fill.
You can look at Paint's Help information if you get stuck. Remember that this info was online in Help about Paint in Windows 7.
Example: Using fonts, font size, text color, background color, shape, eraser.
Your picture should NOT match the example below. Be creative.
Since the picture has never been saved before, the Save As dialog
box appears.
The default file type is PNG.
The default location is This PC.
But, Paint remembers
the last location you used.
d:\class\paint docs\myname.bmp
(Type this exactly as written here or copy and paste it, except use the correct drive letter for your own removable disk. Yes, the path is wrong on purpose!)
Click in the 'Save as type' to open the drop list of types and then
click on 24-bit Bitmap (*.bmp, *.dib).
This file type will create the largest file size, which is not usually what you want.
In the next lesson you will use this file while learning how to reduce the file size.
Error: An error message appears saying either that the path you typed does not exist or that the file name is invalid.
The problem is that we previously renamed the folder paint docs to win project2 so part of the path does not exist.
Many programs will, instead of this error message, ask if you want to create the missing folder. A very useful feature! Paint is not that cooperative. You must create the folder yourself.
Other error messages:
Spaces and spelling: These are important in file
names! It is easy to make a mistake with spaces!
Work around for path with spaces: When you are using an application that doesn't like spaces in the name, put quotes " " around the whole path like: "e:\class\paint docs\myname.bmp".
File Size: If your canvas is really large
and you are saving in a BMP format, the file
can be really large. Will it fit on your disk? If you get a message that there
is not enough space on your disk, use the technique in the
section Resize Canvas above to reduce the canvas to a more reasonable size.