Width of paletes

I have a problem with width of peletes on a right side of photoshop.
In english version of CS5 it is about 230px, in polish version it is 310px and I can't to narrow it more.
Is any explanation or solution for this?

Please note that I have nothing to do with the rantings of "pdebruyker", pdebruyker is an alias of AuntGladys. He's posting under a similar account name (mine is pdebruycker), because I pissed him off by replying to one of his postings by saying that someone should track him down and burn him.

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              // create a data folder for your script in the user's application data
              var myDataFolder = new Folder( Folder.userData.absoluteURI + "/SampleScripts" );
              // make certain the folder exists
              myDataFolder.create();
              // write the image file
              var myFile = new File( myDataFolder.absoluteURI + "/myFile.png" );
              myFile.encoding = "BINARY";
              myFile.open( "w" );
              myFile.write( myBinary );
              myFile.close();
              // there is now a valid png image in your script's user data folder
         // example of using ScriptUI's drawing api to make a dropdownlist draw as an icon (until the user clicks it, then it's a menu)
         myFlyout = function( palette ) {
              palette.myFlyout = palette.add( "dropdownlist", [ ( palette.frameSize.width - 20 ), 0, palette.frameSize.width, 20 ] );
              palette.myFlyout.onDraw = function() {
                   this.graphics.drawImage( ScriptUI.newImage( myIconFile ), 0, 0 );
              if ( !palette.onShow ) {
                   palette.onShow = function() {
                        this.myFlyout.draw( this );
         // A slightly more complex example putting it all together where you can pass a callback function and an array of menu items
        // this function will add a flyout menu to the top-right corner of any ScriptUI window. It does not need to be a palette.
         addFlyout = function( palette, menuItems, callback ) {
              // create a script data folder to contain resources such as the flyout icon
              var myScriptDataFolder = new Folder( Folder.userData.absoluteURI + "/SampleScripts" );
              myScriptDataFolder.create();
              // point a file to the expected location of the icon image
              var myFlyoutIcon = new File( myScriptDataFolder.absoluteURI + "/flyoutIcon.png" );
              if ( !myFlyoutIcon.exists ) { // if it's not there, then create the file
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                   myFlyoutIcon.encoding = "BINARY";
                   myFlyoutIcon.open( "w" );
                   myFlyoutIcon.write( binData );
                   myFlyoutIcon.close();
               } // the above code to create the file should only execute once for each user on the machine
              palette._flyoutMenu = {}; // this object will hold the menu related stuff - prefaced with an underscore to avoid naming collisions
              palette._flyoutMenu.items = menuItems;
              palette._flyoutMenu.callback = callback;
              palette._flyoutMenu.draw = function( palette ) { // actually draw the menu          
                   // add the dropdownlist object to the window
                   palette._flyout = palette.add( "dropdownlist", [ ( palette.frameSize.width - 20 ), 0, palette.frameSize.width, 20], palette._flyoutMenu.items );
                   // make sure nothing is selected
                   palette._flyout.selection = null;
                   // add the onDraw method that will draw the icon instead of the normal dropdownlist
                   palette._flyout.onDraw = function() {
                        this.graphics.drawImage( ScriptUI.newImage( myFlyoutIcon ), 0, 0 );
                   // add the onChange method to fire off the callback
                   palette._flyout.onChange = function() {
                        this.window._flyoutMenu.callback( this.selection );
                        this.selection = null;
              // execute the draw function to place the flyout in the window
              palette._flyoutMenu.draw( palette );
    // sample usage
         // create the menu items
         var menuItems = [ "One", "Two", "Three", "-", "Four", "Five" ];
         // create the callback function
         sampleCallback = function( selection ) {
              // just letting all the menu items fall through for this demo
              switch( selection.text ) {
                   case "One" :
                   case "Two" :
                   case "Three" :
                   case "Four" :
                   case "Five" : {
                        alert( selection.text );
         // create the palette
         var myPalette = new Window( "palette", "Fly Out Menu Demo" );
         // adding some static text, just because
         myPalette.add( "statictext", undefined, "Demonstration of using ScriptUI drawing to customize control appearance" );
         //center and show the palette
         myPalette.center();
         myPalette.show();
         // add the flyout menu
         addFlyout( myPalette, menuItems, sampleCallback );

  • Layered Flash Video

    Hey Guys
    I would like to put a video on my web page like the one at
    the following link
    http://www.igothere.com/?engine=88Bruce.com&filiaff=4508
    You can order this for ya website at
    http://www.myvirtualsalesperson.com/
    but i dont have the money to order it.
    I was just wondering how hard it would be to create this at
    home?
    Here is the script
    <OBJECT id=Flash1
    codeBase=http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=5,0, 0,0
    height=346 width=289
    classid=clsid:D27CDB6E-AE6D-11cf-96B8-444553540000
    VIEWASTEXT>
    <PARAM NAME="_cx" VALUE="7646">
    <PARAM NAME="_cy" VALUE="9155">
    <PARAM NAME="FlashVars" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="Movie" VALUE="
    http://www.myvirtualsalesperson.com/berman/bbmvsp1.swf">
    <PARAM NAME="Src" VALUE="
    http://www.myvirtualsalesperson.com/berman/bbmvsp1.swf">
    <PARAM NAME="WMode" VALUE="Window">
    <PARAM NAME="Play" VALUE="-1">
    <PARAM NAME="Loop" VALUE="0">
    <PARAM NAME="Quality" VALUE="High">
    <PARAM NAME="SAlign" VALUE="L">
    <PARAM NAME="Menu" VALUE="-1">
    <PARAM NAME="Base" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="AllowScriptAccess" VALUE="always">
    <PARAM NAME="Scale" VALUE="ShowAll">
    <PARAM NAME="DeviceFont" VALUE="0">
    <PARAM NAME="EmbedMovie" VALUE="0">
    <PARAM NAME="BGColor" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="SWRemote" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="MovieData" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="SeamlessTabbing" VALUE="1">
    <PARAM NAME="Profile" VALUE="0">
    <PARAM NAME="ProfileAddress" VALUE="">
    <PARAM NAME="ProfilePort" VALUE="0">
    <EMBED ID="Flash1"
    SRC="
    http://www.myvirtualsalesperson.com/berman/bbmvsp1.swf"
    HEIGHT="346" WIDTH="289"
    PALETTE="BACKGROUND" Quality="High"
    Loop="FALSE" Play="TRUE" Scale="ShowAll"
    SAlign="L" ALT=""
    PLUGINSPAGE="
    http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer/"
    TYPE="application/x-shockwave-flash">
    </OBJECT>
    On the website where ya order it from, says the video is
    layered and no body else knows hows its done.
    Is this True? if its not can some one tell me how its done?
    Thanx guys
    Hayzie

    And not particularly well done.
    When the SWF file is viewed alone, it is apparent that field
    mush is present in the video footage. The footage should first be
    imported to a program like After Effects where the footage should
    be interpreted as Upper Field First. And the composition in which
    the footage is used should be set for frames (i.e., no fields).
    Export the composition using the Flash Video Exporter to create the
    FLV file.

  • 14.2 updates changes width of Swatches palette

    Hi, as soon as I updated ps cc to 14.2 the swatches palette, when docked does not behave correctly: all swatches are placed as you have resized the palette, placing them in wrong order. Undocking the palette reposition the swatches correctly.
    I've made sure the docked palette is not scaled, in fact even on brand new, reset "essential" preset interface displays the issue even with default palette.
    Scaling the docked palettes does not fix the problem.
    Here's an example with the DEFAULT interface on a fresh installation
    first one is the unlocked palette, works as expected
    second one is the docked palette (wich is on the default Essentials UI!)
    My guess is that the minimum docked palette width has increased by some pixels with the update. This may look like a minor issue, but it skrewed up all my custom palettes

    The panel is not "broken", but its minimum width has increased due to the inclusion of the new longer phrase "Smart Object" in the Layers panel options filter list.
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  • Report not printing all the characters -main section width greater than 11"

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    Srikanth

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  • How can I modify column width in a spreadsheet report without using an Excel template

    I currently use the LabVIEW Report Generation toolkit in LabVIEW 2011SP1 to create simple spreadsheet reports that I can build/print without having Microsoft Office products installed.  I really like being able to do this, and it allows me to generate nice on-demand data reports - I'm also not tied to having Office installed on the system I'm using, so this works on just about any test fixture I can install the software on.  
    I recently have a requirement that I must have variable-length columns in my report.  I currently use the VI "Append Text Table to Report" in order to create a text table, but the column width requirement is that all columns must be equal width UNLESS I use an Excel Template file to define my column widths.  
    My questions are:
    Is it possible to create a text table and define per-column widths without using an Excel Template?  If so, how?  My report mainly has a lot of small numerical values for the columns, but some columns contain system names or status messages - I really hate the longer text blocks wrapping and taking up so much real-estate when if I could control the column widths I can get all my data on a single line.
    I'll admit I haven't tried this myself yet, but if I use an Excel Template will that require me to have Excel installed on the PC in order to print/generate reports?
    Is there a recommended way (with an example) of generating a text table in a report with or without using the "Append Text Table to Report" VI that allows me to have custom column widths that doesn't require me to manually build a custom print page?  If I do have to create a custom print page, what would be the most straightforward approach?
    Thanks!
    -Danny

    Sure, I'll provide a pared down example that demonstrates my use-case:
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    I find myself needing to be able to define per-column widths, not just a single global column width parameter.  
    The only way I have found to do this is by using an Excel template file.  The "New Report.vi" takes in a "template" parameter, and if used, the report generation toolkit can be set to ignore the "Column Width" input parameter on the "Append Table to Report.vi" by setting the width value to -1.  Instead it will launch Excel, open the template file provided, build the table using the template, will close Excel, and will attach the generated table to the report.  However, I have a strict requirement that Microsoft Office NOT be required to be installed on the computer.  
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  • Error while adding customize component to palette.

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  • [JS][CS3] Method failing in palette

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  • How to change the width of a field?

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    As far as I knows, you can only increase the width of a
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  • How to change the width of the field?

    Hi all,
    I would like to decrease the width of a field on my report.
    But I can't do it in the Property palette. I am not able to change the width property. The width of the database column is varchar2(255). I do not want to decrease the length of the database column, but only the width property of the field.
    Any ideas?
    Regards
    Leonid Pavlov

    You can't change that from where you are trying because that info is coming from the database. To resize the field just open the layout editor and size the field to the size you want.
    Thanks,
    Tom

  • How do I keep a table the same size but change the width of columns?

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    Julie

    @Julie – you can change column width by alt + shift + dragging left or right cell sides without changing the overall size of the table.
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    Uwe

  • Need custom column widths in Append Text Table to Report

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    The hierarchy is as follows:
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    NI report.lvclass:Append Table to Report 
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    There is a highly relevant thread under discussion here:
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  • SAPScript: how tu adjust heigh and width of standard text (logo)?

    Hi!
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    INCLUDE ZHEX-LOGO OBJECT TEXT ID ST
    Will reward,
    Mindaugas

    Hi Mindaugas,
    While uploading using RSTXLDMC. You have to maintain your size of the logo.
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    Upload TIFF files to SAPscript texts
    Description
    The report RSTXLDMC allows a TIFF graphics file to be uploaded from the file system of the R/3 GUI to a standard text in the R/3 word processor SAPscript. (TIFF is a registered trademark of the Aldus Corporation.)
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    The black and white raster images ( BMON) can be printed using the following printer types:
    PCL-5 printer
    PostScript printer
    Kyocera PRESCRIBE printer
    Device type SAPWIN (with SAPlpd 32-bit as of Version 2.41 for Windows NT or Windows 95)
    The color raster images (BCOL) can be printed using the following printer types:
    PCL-5 printer with color capability (e.g. HP Color LaserJet). Color graphics are not printed properly on monochrome PCL-5 printers (e.g. HP LaserJet 5), because the printer cannot set the color palette as required and does not perform any gray-level conversion.
    PostScript printer (color graphics are automatically converted to gray levels on black and white printers using PostScript) Device type SAPWIN (with SAPlpd 32-bit as of Version 2.41 for Windows NT or Windows 95) During TIFF graphic import, the basic set " Baseline TIFF 6.0 " of the TIFF specification 6.0 is supported.
    To maintain compatibility with earlier versions of the report RSTXLDMC, it is also possible to convert the TIFF graphic directly into a black and white raster image for a particular printer type when uploading. These are the three printer types PCL-5 (parameter type=PCL ), PostScript (parameter type=POST) and Kyocera PRESCRIBE (parameter type=PRES ). A raster image uploaded in this manner can only be printed using the appropriate printer type.
    Besides TIFF raster graphics, direct printer commands in the respective printer language (PCL-5, PostScript or Prescribe) can also be contained in the file which is to be uploaded (printer macros). They are then transferred to the standard text unmodified.
    The graphics are output by inserting the standard text into the document which is to be printed, directly or using an INCLUDE command. The printer commands, which for example draw a company logo on the page, are only output if the print request is processed by the printer driver corresponding to the macro type, otherwise they are ignored. Example: A macro of type PCL is contained in a print request. If the request is output to a printer with type HPLJIIID (to which the driver HPL2 is assigned), the macro data is sent to the printer. If the request is printed on a printer of type POSTSCPT (to which the driver POST is assigned), the output of the macro data is suppressed.
    In the standard text, the printer commands are inserted between the HEX ... ENDHEX command lines in hex notation. Various report parameters allow the graphic or printer macro to be placed on the page or at the current text position. Note: When the /:HEX command line which precedes the macro appears in the text, a line break is generally made before the graphic is output. The output of the macro therefore begins in the next text line at the left window border of the current page window, as long as a shift to the right is not specified (see below).
    If your own printer macros are uploaded and not TIFF files, you must ensure yourself that the normal (text) output of the driver is not impaired when the printer commands are inserted in the output from the uploaded file. The printer drivers pass the data contained in the file to the printer unmodified, therefore without control over the individual actions this triggers on the printer. For example, syntax errors should not be generated by the PostScript commands (type POST), or form feeds should not be contained in the file (unless this was intended) for PCL-5 (type PCL).
    Restrictions:
    In general, the output of graphics generated via RSTXLDMC from R/3 is not suitable for mass printing (that is, unless you are using the "Graphic resident on printer" feature): the R/3 spooler has to hold significantly more data in its output files. If the graphics occur several times in a spool request, the data also reoccurs. Apart from this, the network is more heavily loaded in sending the increased volume of data to the printer and the printer output is slowed significantly (varies according to printer model) if raster graphics are output as well as the text.
    If your graphics reside on your printer during a printing job, the degree of 'correctness' with which they are printed depends on the amount of memory available in your printer. R/3 print drivers are unable to determine whether the amount of memory available is enough! If one of the graphics that you have marked as resident is not displayed, try reloading the graphic and switching off the parameter "Graphic resident on printer".
    When printing black and white graphics on PCL-5 printers, image data is compressed in order to greatly reduce the file size.
    The output of graphics and macros on PCL-5 printers, PostScript printers and device type SAPWIN (type BMON, BCOL, PCL, POST) is adapted to the page orientation used, that is if landscape is used instead of portrait, the graphic is also turned when output. This is not the case for the PRESCRIBE printers (type BMON, PRES)! With these printers, the graphic is not automatically turned when landscape is used, but appears on the page in the identical position as for portrait. You are therefore recommended not to output raster images when printing in landscape on PRESCRIBE printers.
    PRESCRIBE printers do not support the resolutions 200 and 600 dots per inch when printing raster images.
    Not all PCL-5 compatible printers support the resolutions 200 and 600 dots per inch when printing raster images.
    TIFF graphics with compression type 2 ("CCITT Group 3 1-Dimensional Modified Huffman run length encoding ") can currently not be imported although this is a component of the Baseline TIFF 6.0 specification for monochrome images.
    Color TIFF graphics with full color representation (ie. a lot more than 256 colors) are automatically converted into 256 gray levels when uploading with type BCOL.
    When TIFF graphics are converted to black and white raster images (type BMON, PCL, POST, PRES) there is no default simulation of gray levels or colors of the original image on the printer (for example, by using different tones of gray). Each pixel of the original image is converted to a white or black pixel on the printer according to its intensity value.
    The parameter "Number of TIFF gray levels" does, however, allow a simulation of gray/colour tones of the original image through levels of gray on the printer, when using type PCL, POST or PRES. This parameter is ignored for type BMON.
    The conversion of TIFF graphics can be so time-consuming that it is recommendable to execute the report RSTXLDMC in batch processing. Note: in batch, the file is always read from the file system of the application server (ie. not from the file system of the GUI).
    The length of an individual text in the text file is limited. When importing TIFF graphics with very large dimensions, especially if more than 2 gray levels are used, a termination can therefore occur when saving the standard text ("EXPORT_TOO_MUCH_DATA"). This restriction can only be avoided by reducing the TIFF graphics. Note: The display of a raster image in Postscript or PRESCRIBE format needs from two to three times as much space as displaying in PCL-5.
    When processing very large TIFF images on PostScript printers, a print termination can occur with PS error message "limitcheck". In this case the internal memory of the printer is insufficient to scale the required raster image. This implementation limit cannot be influenced by changing the report parameters when importing.
    Requirement
    The file which is to be uploaded can contain the following formats/ commands:
    Baseline TIFF 6.0 raster image files. The image information of the TIFF file is converted into black and white/color raster images when uploading. Note: As the TIFF format allows a variety of variants, only a basic set of TIFF 6.0 formats is supported here described in the TIFF 6.0 specification as Baseline TIFF 6.0.
    PCL : PCL-5, Hewlett Packard Printer Control Language 5 for HP LaserJet 3, 4, 5 series and compatible printers. The data is output by the printer driver HPL2 only.
    PRES: Kyocera PRESCRIBE for Kyocera laser printers. The data is output by the printer driver PRES only.
    POST: Adobe PostScript or EPS format (encapsulated PostScript ) for PostScript printers. The data is output by the printer driver POST only. In the upload, one of the end-of-file markers (CTRL-D, hex $04) which may be contained in the PostScript file is not transferred.
    For PostScript files which contain a bounding box entry (for example, all EPS files) the macro/graphic can be scaled to a size specified by the user. In this case, a small lead text and trailer are generated by the report for the macro data and inserted in the standard text.
    Parameters of RSTXLDMC
    File name
    Path and file name of the file to be uploaded in the file system of the R/3 frontend (dialog processing) or in the file system of the application server (batch processing)
    Type
    Way which the data contained in the file is to be converted. Possible values are BMON, BCOL, PCL, POST and PRES. With parameter values BMON and BCOL, a TIFF 6.0 file is expected. This is converted into either a black and white raster image (BMON) or a color raster image (BCOL). These raster images are printer-independent and can be printed using various printer types (see above).
    With parameter values PCL, POST and PRES, either a TIFF 6.0 file or a file with printer commands in the appropriate printer langauge is expected. If the file is a TIFF file, it is converted into a black and white raster image for the printer type specified in the parameter. The presence of a TIFF file is recognized automatically. If the file is not a TIFF file, the file contents are regarded as the printer macro of the respective type. Data loaded with type PCL, POST or PRES can only be printed on the respective printer type.
    Resolution for TIFF raster images
    Resolution which should be used when importing a TIFF raster image, in dots per inch (dpi). If an allowed value is entered here, this overrides the resolution information in the TIFF file. The allowed values are:
    75 dpi
    100 dpi
    150 dpi
    200 dpi (not for type PRES, for PCL only HP LaserJet 4,5 series)
    300 dpi
    600 dpi (not for type PRES, for PCL only HP LaserJet 4,5 series)
    Changing the resolution affects the size of the graphic on the printer. If a resolution of 300 dpi is stated in the TIFF file and this parameter is set to 75 dpi, the graphic is four times as big when printed as at the outset.
    Note: Kyocera PRESCRIBE printers do not support 200 and 600 dpi resolutions.
    Note: Not all PCL-5 printers support resolutions 200 and 600 dpi, for example HP LaserJet 3 series does not, but LaserJet 4 and 5 series do.
    Graphic Resident on Printer
    Normally, graphics that occur more than once in a printing job (a company logo that appears on each page, for example) are sent to the printer repeatedly each time they are needed. In order to avoid this kind of redundancy, you can select this checkbox on the selection screen. The R/3 print driver then stores the graphic in the printer's memory and the printer retrieves the 'resident' graphic memory every time that re-occurs in your job.
    Caution: Whether or not the printer correctly reproduces the graphic depends on the amount of memory available in the printer during the printing job! You should avoid using this feature with color graphics since they take up a lot more memory than monochrome graphics.
    This parameter can only be used with types "BMON" and "BCOL".
    Absolute positioning
    Determines whether the macro/graphic is positioned absolutely or is to be output at the current text position. If this checkbox is selected, the graphic is positioned absolutely (parameters "X-position" and "Y-position" are used), if this checkbox is not selected, the graphic is positioned at the current text position (parameters "Reserved height" and "Shift to right" are used)
    Absolute X-position
    Horizontal position (space from left border) of the macro/graphic, if absolute positioning is required. This is the parameter XPOS of the HEX command.
    Absolute Y-position
    Vertical position (space from upper border) of the macro/graphic, if absolute positioning is required. This is the parameter YPOS of the HEX command.
    Reserve height automatically
    If this checkbox is selected, the system automatically inserts the actual height of the graphic during printing into the subsequent "Reserved height" parameter.
    Reserved height
    If positioned at the current text position, this parameter specifies the horizontal spacing to be reserved for the macro/graphic, which must not be printed with text from the paragraph. This is the parameter HEIGHT of the HEX command.
    Shift to right
    If positioned at the current text position, this parameter specifies the space between the left border of the macro/graphic and the left border of the page window. If this value is increased, the macro/graphic is shifted to the right. This is the parameter LEFT of the HEX command.
    Unit of measurement for positioning
    The unit of measurement in which the position values (X,Y, height, shift) are specified. Possible values are CM (centimeters), MM (millimeters), IN (inches), PT (typographic point = 1/72 inch), TW (1/20 point = 1/1440 inch)
    Text title
    Comment used for the attribute "Title" of the standard text generated as well as as a comment line in the text itself
    Line width
    Number of columns to be used in the standard text when generating the HEX...ENDHEX command lines. The default value is 132
    Text name
    Name of the standard text to be generated. If an * character occurs in the name, it is replaced by the value of the parameter "Printer type". For example, if the entry is ZHEX-IMAGE1-* and the printer type = PCL, the text name ZHEX-IMAGE1-PCL is generated. The default value for the name is ZHEX-MACRO-<printer type>, but the standard text can be named as required (take into account customer reserve). Standard texts are client-dependent!
    Note: The name of a standard text can be up to 32 characters long !
    Text ID
    ID of the standard text to be generated. The default value is ST (general standard texts)
    Text language
    Language key of the standard text to be generated. The default value is the logon language
    PostScript scaling
    Flag which determines how the macros/graphics of type POST are handled. If set to 'X', the report expects a PostScript comment line in the file
    %%BoundingBox llx lly urx ury (e.g. %%BoundingBox -1.5 0 21.4 14.1)
    as present, for example, in all EPS files, in which the dimensions and the position of the macro/graphic are specified (if a bounding box comment is not included, 0 0 1 1 is assumed as the default value). This information is then used by the report to insert PostScript commands which scale the macro/graphic to the size specified in the parameters "Width" and "Height" (listed below).
    If the flag is set to ' ' (blank), the PostScript file is transferred to the standard text without any additions (any transformations to the coordinate system used by the printer driver must already be contained in the file).
    The flag must be set to 'X' for the import of TIFF files for type POST.
    Width according to PS scaling
    Required width of the macro/graphic if the flag PostScript scaling is set. Can remain at zero for the import of TIFF files, the size is then determined by the resolution of the graphic.
    Height according to PS scaling
    Required height of the macro/graphic if the flag PostScript scaling is set. Can remain at zero for the import of TIFF files, the size is then determined by the resolution of the graphic.
    If you want to scale the PostScript graphic with these parameters, one of the two values, width or height, can be specified with zero. The graphic is then scaled so that the width-to-height ratio remains unchanged and the original graphic is not distorted.
    Unit of measurement for PS scaling
    Unit of measurement in which the parameters "Width" and "Height" are specified. Possible values are CM (centimeters), MM (millimeters), IN (inches), PT (typographic point = 1/72 inch), TW (1/20 point = 1/1440 inch)
    Number of TIFF gray levels
    Number of gray tones which are to be used on the printer for displaying the original image. Note: This parameter is only evaluated when using types PCL, POST or PRES!
    Possible values are 2,4,9. With the default value 2, each pixel of the original image is converted either to a white or a black pixel on the printer. With the value 4, each pixel of the original image is converted on the printer with 4 pixels, which simulate 4 different gray levels. With the value 9, each pixel of the original image is converted on the printer with 9 pixels which simulate 9 different gray levels.
    Note: With values 4 or 9 the resolution of the image is doubled or tripled. The restrictions on the possible resolutions (see previous parameter) then apply for the resulting resolution.
    Output
    Individual steps of the upload procedure are logged in the report list generated and, if necessary, errors reported. The uploading of TIFF graphics, in particular, is cancelled if there is a variant which is not supported. A message to this effect is then issued. If execution is successful, the report generates a standard text with the key specified in the parameters. If the standard text already exists, a window appears with a warning before the text is overwritten.
    Regards,
    Ameer Baba.

  • Change IndexColorModel to create palette effect?

    Here's one for you... Is there an easy way to change the palette in the IndexColorModel of a BufferedImage?
    Here's what I'm doing: I've got an 8-bit IndexColorModel with some palette values set. I use that to create the BufferedImage, and then get a WritableRaster from that to create the graphics data. Basically, it's something like this:cm=new IndexColorModel(8,256,ra,ga,ba); // ra, ga, and ba are short for "red array" et cetera.
    myimage=new BufferedImage(width,height,BufferedImage.TYPE_BYTE_INDEXED,cm);
    WritableRaster r=image.getRaster();All of this is relatively simple everyday stuff, I'm sure, to the experienced Java 2D programmer.
    Here's the fun part, though... I want to be able to specify a different palette every time I draw this BufferedImage to the screen (specifically, a Graphics2D from either a Frame or an Applet). I'll pass three 256-byte arrays (red, green, and blue) to a function which will use those colors to draw the BufferedImage. (This is to create some rather unusual color effects, naturally.)
    Now it seems like it should be possible to do this by creating a new IndexColorModel every time, and using that and the existing BufferedImage's Raster to create a new BufferedImage, but that seems excessively wasteful. This is for a game, too, so performance is an important issue; I'd rather not waste time with wanton creation and destruction of hundreds of BufferedImage objects every second.
    Is there a better way?

    I would like to re-open this thread, Mr. Kglad, I did exactly what you told me, and you were right in everything, nevertheless, the effect like the  "relief" when the country brings out for a second and go back to its original position it's special, if you look at THIS map you can see the effect clearly, and as you can see the selected county "bounce" (I don't know if that make any sense) and go back to it's place while the mouse is over, that's the effect I want to achieve, is there any special event in AS3 in order to do that? it's seems like a mix of fade in and out... and lots of things.
    Thank you very much for all of your help, anybody who could know the answer please give me a hand

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