home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1998-08-01 | 9.1 KB | 211 lines | [TEXT/ttxt] |
- RELEASE NOTES FOR CLIP 'N' SAVE
-
-
- Dedicated to Cameron Alexander Swann
-
-
- I've had problems with coupons and dotted rules since I moved my
- work to the Mac. I can use the plug and play options in Quark. Or I
- can roll my own with a dashed stroke in Illustrator. The former
- option provides no control, while the latter offers no precision.
- "Close enough is good enough" is the unwritten subtext of The
- Macintosh Way. But for typographers (and their customers), "almost
- right" is WRONG. This software makes this problem go away.
-
- Clip 'n' Save (C&S) does this: it creates dotted or coupon rules or
- borders to your specifcations. It writes Encapsulated PostScript
- (EPS) files that can be placed directly in your publishing software
- or opened for further editing in your drawing software. You can
- specify the type of object to create, its geometry, the weight,
- length and gap length of the ruling. You can see how the specified
- object will look prior to writing the file. And if you have a
- particular way of working, you can save your preferences, so that
- they will be the default settings with subsequent launches.
-
- C&S is compatible with both systems 6 and 7, is 32-bit clean,
- Multi-Finder compliant, and it always does its share of the dishes.
- It writes Adobe Illustrator 3.0 or Adobe Illustrator 1.1 (Aldus
- FreeHand-compatible) files, at your option. These files have a PICT
- preview, so they can be imported by publishing software with no
- further editing. The Illustrator objects created are actual
- multiple-control-point objects (as distinct from dashed rules), which
- permits substantially easier editing for trapping in your drawing
- software.
-
-
- Cutting Clip 'n' Save down to size...
-
- C&S consists of two dialog boxes and the menu bar (plus a few error
- alerts and the "About..." box). In the menu bar, Quit quits (there's
- a shock!). The entries in the Edit menu are greyed out (since this is
- a dialog), but CMD-X, CMD-C and CMD-V will work. The Preferences menu
- lets you save your current settings to use as future defaults (Save
- Preferences), change the current settings to the most recently saved
- preferences (Restore Saved Preferences), or change the current
- settings to the "factory" defaults (Restore Defaults).
-
- In the "Settings..." dialog, Object type is a picture radio button.
- Just click on the type of object you want to create. Very probably,
- the software will see most of its use in making coupons, but the
- rules are provided to make is possible to create very precise grids
- in Illustrator or FreeHand. By moving copies of these rules by
- precise amounts, you can control corner and intersection alignment,
- which is very difficult to achieve by hand with dashed rules.
-
- File version lets you select what type of file to create. If you use
- Adobe Illustrator, select "Illustrator 3.0". If you use Aldus
- FreeHand, select "AI 1.1 (FreeHand)". To edit a C&S file from
- FreeHand, you have to open it through File Open (no D&D, boo hoo!).
- The file will be opened into an untitled document.
-
- At the top of the Object specifications section, there are six edit
- text fields. You fill these the measurements of object's attributes.
- Measurements can be expressed in picas and points, inches or
- millimeters. You only need to fill in the fields appropriate to the
- type of object you are creating. So for a Horizontal Rule, you can
- leave Depth empty. For a Vertical Rule, you can leave Width empty.
- And for all three objects, you can leave Corner Radius empty, since
- this field (which someday may permit Rounded Rectangles) is
- unimplemented in this version.
-
- Width and Depth describe the actual geometry of the object, from edge
- to edge. Rule weight is the weight of the rules that will be used to
- create the object. Rule length is the desired length of the rule
- segments. Gap length is the desired length of the interruptions
- between rule segments.
-
- The measurements you enter into these fields are parsed
- intelligently. If a measurement doesn't make sense (when you hit
- Preview or Start...), the software will beep and highlight the bad
- field. Picas are flagged with an infix 'P' or 'p', with subsequent
- numbers being interpreted as points (e.g., 24p6). Inches are flagged
- with '"', and millimeters are flaged with 'm', 'M', 'mm', or 'MM'.
- Inches and millimeters are strictly postfix (e.g., 2.25" or 37mm). If
- there is anything following an inches or millimeters flag, the field
- will be highlighted for correction. If a measure has no picas, inches
- or millimeters flags, it is interpreted as points. Fractional values
- can be expressed with a decimal point. In all cases, legal
- measurements are being converted to points, since this is what
- Illustrator eats.
-
- These are some measurements and their results:
-
- ENTERED RESULT (in points)
- ------- ------
- 162 162
- p162 162
- 13p6 162
- P162 162
- 13P6 162
- 2.25" 162
- 2.333333" 167.99999
- 37m 104.88191
- 37M 104.88191
- 37mm 104.88191
- 37MM 104.88191
-
- 162+162 Error (no calculator functions)
- 13p6p7 Error (multiple qualifier flags)
- 2"4m Error (multiple qualifier flags)
- 37mm2.25" Error (multiple qualifier flags)
-
- Below the measurements fields are four pop-up menus. Position and
- Corners are ignored unless you are creating a rectangle. Position
- controls where the rules will sit with respect to the path described
- by Width and Depth. Inside the path makes the most sense to me, but
- the other options are provided to give you the choice.
-
- Corners controls how the corner pieces are created in rectangles.
- Full-length rules can be too dark, particularly with heavy rule
- weights, so the option is provided to use Half-length rules.
-
- Okay, here's the dirty little secret, the raison d'etre of Clip 'n'
- Save: the math almost never works out perfectly. This is why dashed
- paths in Illustrator are usually so goofy. Unless _you_ do the math
- exactly right, there will be some small amount of space left over,
- which Illustrator will do nothing intelligent with. But: all that
- _can_ be done is to finesse one or more values by small amounts, to
- make the math work out right. The Finesse pop-up lets you specify
- which values to fudge. (The default setting is to finesse the gaps,
- and you are advised to leave it at this setting if you are setting
- Rounded Endcaps).
-
- The Endcaps popup lets you specify whether the ends of each rule
- segment are to be Squared or Rounded. This is provided, primarly, so
- that you can create precise dotted (bullet) rules. If the Rule weight
- and the Rule length are equal, you'll get circular rule segments. If
- the Rule length is greater than the Rule weight, you'll get sausage
- shapes, perfect for that Oscar Meyer cents-off coupon (grin).
-
- The buttons along the bottom of the dialog are pretty
- straightforward. Preview brings up the Preview... dialog box, which
- illustrates what the final object will look like. You can use
- Preview... to establish that your settings are yielding the visual
- effect you want to achieve. If the Width or Depth are greater than
- the screen width or depth, the dialog will be clipped to fit. In that
- event, you will see only the top left corner of the object.
-
- The Start... button creates your new EPS file. You will be prompted
- for a file name in a standard SF box.
-
-
- About the dedication...
-
- Clip 'n' Save is dedicated to my son, Cameron, because he taught
- himself to walk while it was in development. My daughter Meredith is
- a binary-state child; she switches from incapacity to mastery
- instantaneously. Cameron is more of a gradualist, a Motie Engineer of
- babyhood if you will. And: of course: the metaphor is coming even if
- you _won't_ (grin). Because: even though I've been making Mac
- software for nearly a year, this is the first big project in which I
- didn't keep a hand on the furniture, so to speak. So Cameron is here
- and forevermore immortalized because he and I learned to "walk" in
- the same way and by the same means.
-
-
- That's it, I think. If you run under System 7+, you might put this
- in your Apple Menu Items folder, to keep it handy...
-
-
- Best,
-
- Greg Swann
-
- 11/27/92
-
-
-
-
- FURTHER NOTES ON VERSION 1.0.2
-
-
- I never draw attention to Easter Eggs, but usually someone finds
- them. I don't know if anyone ever saw these, which are in every Clip
- 'n' Save picture ever made, Illustrator and Freehand files
- respectively:
-
- %!PS-Adobe-3.0 EPSF-3.0
- %%Creator: Adobe Illustrator(TM) 3.0
- %%For: (Cameron Alexander Swann) (ToddlerTech, Inc.)
-
- %!PS-Adobe-2.0 EPSF-1.2
- %%Creator:Adobe Illustrator(TM) 1.1
- %%For: (Cameron Alexander Swann) (TopplerTech, Pty.)
-
- There's gotta be a user and an organization, so I made them my son.
- I've given him a little more acclaim in this archive. Nothing
- substantive has changed in the software, but Illustrator and
- PhotoShop have changed quite a lot in the last five years, with the
- result that the two now dance together quite elegantly. Cameron has
- changed a lot, too. The file "Cameron.GIF" shows how a Clip 'n' Save
- picture can be imported into a photo with radical results. I used
- Cameron because I'm proud of him and because I have uncontested
- rights to the photo. Don't adjust your monitor: He was hanging
- upside-down off the bed when this photo was taken. If you have no
- other software for viewing a GIF file, just drag & drop it on your
- WWW browser.
-
- Greg Swann
-
- 8/1/98
-