First, thanks for care-taking this program! After some renewed use, here are a few quality-of-life suggestions:
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Keyboard shortcuts. Please recognize standard keyboard shortcuts like CTRL+O for open.
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Zooming. Please also recognize the numpad keys - and + for zooming (much like Gimp image editor).
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Preview upon browse. When opening a mat, browsing in a folder with hundreds, it would be nice to use the arrow keys to preview the mat.
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Retention upon loading. Upon loading a new image, please retain the previous zoom and please retain the previous light-level. For example, the user zooms in fully and adjusts the light scale to test for emissive pixels. Upon opening the next image, the zoom is reset but the light scale appears reset but isn't until you adjust it again.
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extension feature. would it be possible to search a folder of mats and identify those which use emissive colors? There are so many 3rd-party mats that use the colors of the 1st two rows of the palette, and I have been using Gimp color-exchange to fix them. Finding them is tedious.
First, thanks for care-taking this program! After some renewed use, here are a few quality-of-life suggestions:
Keyboard shortcuts. Please recognize standard keyboard shortcuts like CTRL+O for open.
Zooming. Please also recognize the numpad keys - and + for zooming (much like Gimp image editor).
Preview upon browse. When opening a mat, browsing in a folder with hundreds, it would be nice to use the arrow keys to preview the mat.
Retention upon loading. Upon loading a new image, please retain the previous zoom and please retain the previous light-level. For example, the user zooms in fully and adjusts the light scale to test for emissive pixels. Upon opening the next image, the zoom is reset but the light scale appears reset but isn't until you adjust it again.
extension feature. would it be possible to search a folder of mats and identify those which use emissive colors? There are so many 3rd-party mats that use the colors of the 1st two rows of the palette, and I have been using Gimp color-exchange to fix them. Finding them is tedious.