After an evaluation, GNOME has moved from Bugzilla to GitLab. Learn more about GitLab.
No new issues can be reported in GNOME Bugzilla anymore.
To report an issue in a GNOME project, go to GNOME GitLab.
Do not go to GNOME Gitlab for: Bluefish, Doxygen, GnuCash, GStreamer, java-gnome, LDTP, NetworkManager, Tomboy.
Bug 122412 - opaque crop preview, please
opaque crop preview, please
Status: RESOLVED DUPLICATE of bug 93360
Product: GIMP
Classification: Other
Component: Tools
unspecified
Other Linux
: Normal enhancement
: ---
Assigned To: GIMP Bugs
Daniel Egger
Depends on:
Blocks:
 
 
Reported: 2003-09-16 07:11 UTC by Martin Pool
Modified: 2004-12-22 21:47 UTC
See Also:
GNOME target: ---
GNOME version: ---


Attachments
how it currently looks (529.17 KB, image/png)
2003-09-16 07:12 UTC, Martin Pool
Details
what i'd like to see (480.74 KB, image/png)
2003-09-16 07:13 UTC, Martin Pool
Details

Description Martin Pool 2003-09-16 07:11:10 UTC
In the current crop tool, I can select a rectangle using the standard
rubberbanding method.  When I have selected the rectangle to which I want
to crop, I click in it or hit the Crop button and the image is cut down.  

This works OK, but I think drawing the rectangle's outline is not the best
way to really give a visual impression of what the effect of the cropping
will be.  The human eye still sees the parts of the picture that are
outside the rectangle.

This is particularly true if you're trying to crop a photo to get a
particular aesthetic effect or visual balance.  I find that I get better
results by cropping repeatedly and undoing, or shrinking down the window. 
(If you are just trying to cut out a well-defined object then the current
system is OK.)

What I would like is for the GIMP to optionally show the would-be-cropped
areas as blocked out.  The effect out to be like using cardboard
right-angles to try things out before cropping a piece of paper.

As a start imagine that everything outside the selected rectangle was just
drawn in black.  This would help in the situation above, but it might make
it a bit hard to adjust the rectangle, because you wouldn't have enough
context.  

Therefore it might be nice if there was a "preview opacity" selection in
the Crop tool control box.  When this is set to 0%, the behaviour is as it
is at present: the to-be-excluded area is shown unobscured.  When it's at
100%, the area outside the crop rectangle is drawn in the background color
(black, white, checks, whatever.)  In between, the background is blended in
so that you have some context but it is also easier to see how the picture
will look when cropped.

Thankyou for your consideration
Comment 1 Martin Pool 2003-09-16 07:12:12 UTC
Created attachment 19972 [details]
how it currently looks
Comment 2 Martin Pool 2003-09-16 07:13:13 UTC
Created attachment 19973 [details]
what i'd like to see
Comment 3 Martin Pool 2003-09-16 07:14:18 UTC
I drew a little mockup.  (I'm bored. :-)
Comment 4 Sven Neumann 2003-09-16 08:35:41 UTC
This has been suggested before (first time about five years ago). It's
still not implemented though.

*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of 93360 ***