There are at least two meanings in CorelDRAW for the term view, and the previous sections have covered only one of them: view quality, the level of detail with which you see your work. Zooming—increasing and decreasing the resolution of a page—and panning
(sliding your view without zooming, similar to using the scroll bars on
the edge of a document window) are the topics of the sections to
follow. In the real world, evaluating the progress of a design from
different perspectives is a chore when compared to CorelDRAW’s
workspace: you back into a ladder in your artist’s loft, you can’t find
your favorite magnifying glass, and you wear the carpet thin moving
toward and away from your canvas! One way to work faster (and usually
smarter) is through a digital design program such as CorelDRAW. Another
good way is to master all the features for zooming your view, covered
next.
Using the Zoom Tool and Property Bar
The Zoom tool is in the fourth group of tools from
the top on the toolbox and is marked by its magnifying glass icon. If
you see a hand icon and not the magnifying glass, click-hold on the icon
to reveal the group. The tool is used to zoom in and zoom out of a
page.
When you’ve chosen the Zoom tool, the property bar
displays buttons plus a drop-down list that provides just about every
common degree of magnification you could ask for, as shown in Figure 1.
You therefore have at least two methods for page navigation when you
select the Zoom tool: clicking with the tool in the document workspace,
and choosing degrees of magnification from the property bar (not
including click or click-drag actions with the cursor).
The following list describes the purpose of these options on the property bar:
Zoom Levels
To increase your current view by a preset magnification, use the Zoom
Levels drop-down selector from the standard property bar when the Zoom
tool is not chosen. When the tool is chosen, you’ll want to use the Zoom
tool property bar. You’ll find selections ranging from 10 percent to
1,600 percent, along with some quick views for zooming based on page
size. You can also type a value directly in the Zoom Levels combo box
and then press ENTER; however, the
zoom levels always increase and decrease beginning at the center of the
drawing window. The option to “zoom in to 1,600 percent, but zoom toward
the lower left of the window” isn’t an option. Views saved in the View
Manager are also included on the
drop-down list. Zoom In
Zoom In is the default state while the Zoom tool is selected. Clicking
once in the drawing window increases your view magnification by twice
the current percentage of zoom—100 percent goes to 200 percent with a
click, then to 400 percent with another click in the window. Here’s an
important point: when you zoom in this way, using the tool and not the
Zoom Levels selections, you zoom in centered relative to the tool’s cursor location onscreen. You direct the final point of your zoom by centering it with your cursor. You can also use the Zoom tool to perform marquee zooming, shown in Figure 2.
You place your cursor at the corner of the area you want to magnify,
and then click-drag diagonally to the opposing corner of an imaginary
bounding box that defines the area to which you want to zoom. You can
target any two opposing corners, but most users tend to diagonally drag
from upper left to lower right of an area.
Tip
CorelDRAW’s
zooming extent runs from a minimum of 1 percent to a maximum of 264,583
percent. You’d be hard-pressed to need a greater magnification range.
The Royal Observatory in Edinburgh is currently looking into CorelDRAW
X5—they downloaded the trial version.
Zoom Out
To decrease your view magnification using the Zoom tool, click the
right mouse button anywhere on or off your document page, or hold SHIFT
in combination with the left mouse button (in case your right mouse
button is broken). Alternatively, click the Zoom Out button (shown next)
on the property bar. Doing so decreases your view to your last-used
magnification or by a power of 2, and the center of the zoom out is the
center of the drawing window. Just as with zooming in, zooming out while
using the Zoom tool is directed by the location of the Zoom tool cursor
onscreen. If you want, for example, to zoom out to the upper right of a
page, you put the cursor at the upper right of the page and then
right-click. To zoom out while any tool is selected, press F3.
Zoom One-Shot The
Zoom One-Shot command is for selecting the Zoom tool momentarily for a
single Zoom In or Zoom Out command while you are using any tool. Once
the zoom has been accomplished, your previous tool reappears. This zoom
command is available in CorelDRAW, but you won’t find it on any toolbar
or on the property bar. Instead, it’s an unassigned feature that you can
access only through customization using a button. If you prefer to use
keyboard shortcuts, F2 is your key. To make the Zoom One-Shot command
appear as a button in a logical and convenient place, the property bar
is ideal—the Zoom One-Shot button can be seen there whenever the Pick
tool is chosen. First, make sure nothing is selected with the Pick tool,
or this isn’t going to work. Open the Options dialog (CTRL+J),
click Workspace | Customization | Commands to display the command
customization page, and choose View from the drop-down menu. Then, find
the Zoom One-Shot button, drag the button to the property bar (between
the Nudge Distance and Duplicate Distance boxes is good), and then
release the button, though only after you see an I-beam to confirm that
you’re adding the button to the desired location. Zoom To Selected
When you have one or more objects selected in the drawing window,
choosing this command changes your view magnification and viewing
position of the page to show the entire selection in the window. Choose
Zoom To Selected from either the Zoom property bar or the Zoom Levels
drop-down menu. You can also Zoom to a selected object while any tool is selected by pressing SHIFT+F2. Zoom To All Objects Zoom
To All Objects changes your view magnification to display all objects
visible in your document window, regardless of whether the objects are
on or off the current document page. Choose Zoom To All Objects from
either the Zoom property bar or the Zoom Levels drop-down menu.
Alternatively, use the F4 shortcut while any tool is selected. Zoom To Page
This changes your view to fit your current page size completely within
the document window. Choose Zoom To Page from either the Zoom property
bar or the Zoom Levels drop-down menu, or press SHIFT+F4 while any tool is selected. Zoom To Page Width/Height
These two commands enable you to zoom your view to the entire width or
height of the current page. You’ll find these tool buttons in the Zoom
property bar or the Zoom Levels drop-down menu.
Using the Mouse Wheel for Zooming
Affordable, high-quality input devices such as the
mouse and even some styli for graphics tablets have had a combo
wheel/button between the left and the right since the 1990s.
Applications (when the engineers wrote the feature in) can scroll a
document window and also zoom a document window. Happily, Corel
engineers built in this capability for zooming (it’s enabled by
default). To zoom into a page, push the scroll wheel away from you;
zooming out is done by dragging the mouse (or stylus) wheel toward you,
as shown here. If you don’t care for this feature, you can restore mouse
wheel action to scrolling by choosing Options (CTRL+J) | Workspace | Display, and then choosing Scroll from the Default Action For Mouse Wheel drop-down list.
Note
If your zooms feel jerky
when you’re using the scroll wheel, this is not a CorelDRAW problem, but
rather that of the physical wheel (the way it was designed). But you
may be able to fine-tune the scroll action using the manufacturer’s
mouse driver options. The best place to check for mouse options is in
Windows Start Menu | Control Panel | Whatever icon you see for your mouse (if any). If there’s no icon for your mouse (or other input device) in the Control Panel, check Start | All Programs.
Many
of the Zoom and Hand tool commands in CorelDRAW have preassigned
shortcut keys that can be changed. To access these shortcut key commands
for viewing, follow these steps:
Open the Options dialog (CTRL+J) or choose Tools | Options. On
the left side of the dialog, under Workspace, click to expand
Customization, and then click Commands to view the Commands page. Choose
View from the drop-down menu at the top-left corner of the right side
of the dialog, and notice that a list of view items appears below it. In
this list, click to select the tool or command to change, as shown
next. Click
the Shortcut Keys tab at the top of the rightmost section of the dialog
to display the shortcut key options. Click to make an insertion point
in the New Shortcut Key box, and then press the key combination (or
single key) that you want to assign as the new shortcut. If, as shown in
this example, you want Zoom To Selection to be CTRL+SHIFT+Z instead of the default SHIFT+F2, you press CTRL and SHIFT and Z at the same time (you don’t
type “Shift” or “Ctrl”). If a conflict appears in the Currently
Assigned To field, you can rethink your custom keyboard combo, or
dismiss (overwrite) the default key assignment by just clicking Assign.
Click the Assign button when you’ve got the keyboard key combo of your
dreams entered. To
delete a shortcut that has already been assigned, click the shortcut in
the Current Shortcut Keys box, and then click the Delete button. Click OK to close the dialog and apply the shortcut key changes.
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Tip
You can quickly Zoom To All Objects on or off the document page by double-clicking the Zoom Tool button in the toolbox.
Using the Pan Tool
The Pan tool—also commonly called the Hand tool—is a
convenient alternative to using document scroll bars; it’s your avatar
for your physical hand while in CorelDRAW. The Hand tool’s keyboard
shortcut is H (for “hand”), and it
works exactly as you’d anticipate. To use it, click-drag in the drawing
window, and your view will travel in the same direction. The principal
advantage to using the Hand tool over the document window scroll bar
“thumbs” (that screen element in the center of a scroll bar you use to
click-drag) is one of economy; you don’t have to put in several “mouse
miles” to change your view, and the Hand tool is great for adjusting
your document view by a fraction of an inch, with precision.
The Hand tool’s cursor looks like a hand (Corel
engineers gave a lot of consideration to the cursor), and with a
click-drag, you can scroll your view in any direction (often called panning) as you would with a camera. As you do this, the scroll bars and document rulers move in unison to reflect the new position.
Tip
Double-click the Pan Tool button in the toolbox to instantly center your page view.
The
Options dialog is where you can customize certain actions when using
the Zoom and Hand tools. Right-clicks, by default, trigger Zoom Out for
both the Zoom and Hand tools. However, you might want to reassign
right-clicking for the Hand and Zoom tools to be more consistent with
the right-click behavior—in other words, to display a pop-up context
menu like the other toolbox tools do.
If this is your preference, you can change your right-clicks by opening the Options dialog (CTRL+J)
and clicking to expand the tree directories under Toolbox | Zoom, Hand
Tool, as shown here. In this dialog, you can set the behavior of the
right-clicks, using either tool to open the pop-up menu instead.
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Several shortcuts are available while using the Pan
tool, some of which are for zooming, not panning. A right-click using
the Pan tool results in a Zoom Out command, and a double-click causes a
Zoom In command. You can also use the keyboard to pan the view of your
document while any tool is selected by using these shortcuts:
Pan left Press and hold ALT+LEFT ARROW. Pan right Press and hold ALT+RIGHT ARROW. Pan up Press and hold ALT+UP ARROW. Pan down Press and hold ALT+DOWN ARROW.
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