OOPS OOPS- How Do I Work With CS2 HISTORY?

J
Posted By
Jethro
Dec 28, 2006
Views
589
Replies
2
Status
Closed
I want to start a new thread and am not doing too good am I?

Back on my friend’s CS2 on his PC again – WXP PRO SP2.

I am now looking at CS2’s ‘history’ window. From what I read in the Help, the things I do are tracked in that window. I created a new little window to play with, and drew four separate small ‘brush’ strokes. I see that each time I did a stroke, a line was entered in the history window. Then I thought I should be able to step back and forth through my strokes by either clicking on a line in the history window or by selecting edit>step backward (or) step forward. I thought to do this would enable me to go back and re-do a stroke at the point of my choice,

If I click on one of the lines in the history window, it highlights it, and I expected to see JUST the strokes I had drawn UP TO THAT POINT. But alas, I still see ALL FOUR strokes. The same thing happens when I use ‘step backward’ & ‘step forward’.

So clearly, I don’t understand the purpose of the ‘history’.

Can someone steer me here?

Thanks

MacBook Pro 16” Mockups 🔥

– in 4 materials (clay versions included)

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S
steph
Dec 30, 2006
actually what you expected to happen IS what should happen… especially when using step backward and step forward.

at first i wondered whether you might have been clicking in that little blank square (causing a brush symbol to appear within)to the left of the text on each history line, which sets the point of operation for the history BRUSH tool, a slightly different thing which can actually overpaint regions from a previous history state into the current one without erasing the rest of the current state, hence you would see no immediate change in your drawing until you chose the history brush and began painting…

but when you also indicated you were also using ‘step backward’ and not seeing any of the 4 lines disappear, i was stumped. i repeated the process you described in CS2, and as i expected, step backward began removing lines. even when history was set to allow ‘non-linear history’, still, when clicking backwards up the list or using step backward, the lines disappeared in reverse order.

sorry i cant help solve your problem, but i hope my reply lessens your confusion in that the history palette really IS meant to be as simple as you had suspected.

"Jethro" wrote in message
I want to start a new thread and am not doing too good am I?
Back on my friend’s CS2 on his PC again – WXP PRO SP2.

I am now looking at CS2’s ‘history’ window. From what I read in the Help, the things I do are tracked in that window. I created a new little window to play with, and drew four separate small ‘brush’ strokes. I see that each time I did a stroke, a line was entered in the history window. Then I thought I should be able to step back and forth through my strokes by either clicking on a line in the history window or by selecting edit>step backward (or) step forward. I thought to do this would enable me to go back and re-do a stroke at the point of my choice,

If I click on one of the lines in the history window, it highlights it, and I expected to see JUST the strokes I had drawn UP TO THAT POINT. But alas, I still see ALL FOUR strokes. The same thing happens when I use ‘step backward’ & ‘step forward’.
So clearly, I don’t understand the purpose of the ‘history’.
Can someone steer me here?

Thanks
J
Jethro
Dec 30, 2006
On Sun, 31 Dec 2006 10:19:00 +1300,
wrote:

actually what you expected to happen IS what should happen… especially when using step backward and step forward.

at first i wondered whether you might have been clicking in that little blank square (causing a brush symbol to appear within)to the left of the text on each history line, which sets the point of operation for the history BRUSH tool, a slightly different thing which can actually overpaint regions from a previous history state into the current one without erasing the rest of the current state, hence you would see no immediate change in your drawing until you chose the history brush and began painting…
but when you also indicated you were also using ‘step backward’ and not seeing any of the 4 lines disappear, i was stumped. i repeated the process you described in CS2, and as i expected, step backward began removing lines. even when history was set to allow ‘non-linear history’, still, when clicking backwards up the list or using step backward, the lines disappeared in reverse order.

sorry i cant help solve your problem, but i hope my reply lessens your confusion in that the history palette really IS meant to be as simple as you had suspected.

Okay – I went back and re-tried the scenario, Guess what? It worked. Of course it did. Well I have no idea what I was doing wrong before, but being new to PS, I guess I could have been doing most anything.

Anyway thanks for your research and HNY

Jethro
"Jethro" wrote in message
I want to start a new thread and am not doing too good am I?
Back on my friend’s CS2 on his PC again – WXP PRO SP2.

I am now looking at CS2’s ‘history’ window. From what I read in the Help, the things I do are tracked in that window. I created a new little window to play with, and drew four separate small ‘brush’ strokes. I see that each time I did a stroke, a line was entered in the history window. Then I thought I should be able to step back and forth through my strokes by either clicking on a line in the history window or by selecting edit>step backward (or) step forward. I thought to do this would enable me to go back and re-do a stroke at the point of my choice,

If I click on one of the lines in the history window, it highlights it, and I expected to see JUST the strokes I had drawn UP TO THAT POINT. But alas, I still see ALL FOUR strokes. The same thing happens when I use ‘step backward’ & ‘step forward’.
So clearly, I don’t understand the purpose of the ‘history’.
Can someone steer me here?

Thanks

MacBook Pro 16” Mockups 🔥

– in 4 materials (clay versions included)

– 12 scenes

– 48 MacBook Pro 16″ mockups

– 6000 x 4500 px

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