A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Z
A file that contains a list of shortcut keys. Different tables are active depending on the task that you are performing.
A separate module that extends the functionality of an application.
alignment guides or live guides
Temporary guidelines that help align objects as you create, resize, or move them in relation to other nearby objects.
The point that remains stationary when you stretch, scale, mirror, or skew an object. Anchor points correspond to the eight handles that appear when an object is selected, as well as the center of a selection box marked by an X.
A file that supports moving images; for example, animated GIF and QuickTime (MOV).
A method of smoothing curved and diagonal edges in images. Intermediate pixels along edges are filled to smooth the transition between the edges and the surrounding area.
Direction keys that move or "nudge" selected objects in small increments. You can also use arrow keys to position the cursor when you type or edit text on-screen or in a dialog box.
A type of text created with the Text tool. Use artistic text to add short lines of text, such as titles, or to apply graphic effects, such as fitting text to a path, creating extrusions and blends, and creating all other special effects. An artistic text object can contain up to 32,000 characters.
The ratio of the width of an image to its height (expressed mathematically as x:y). For example, the aspect ratio of an image that is 640 x 480 pixels is 4:3.
The color of the object that appears under a transparency. The base color and the color of the transparency combine in various ways depending on the merge mode you apply to the transparency.
An invisible line upon which text characters sit.
A series of evenly spaced horizontal lines that follow the pattern of a ruled notebook and help align text and objects.
The process of moving text characters above or below the baseline.
A straight or curved line made up of segments connected by nodes. Each node has control handles that allow the shape of the line to be modified.
The number of binary bits that define the shade or color of each pixel in a bitmap. For example, a pixel in a black-and-white image has a depth of 1 bit, because it can only be black or white. The number of color values that a given bit depth can produce is equal to 2 to the power of the bit depth. For example, a bit depth of 1 can produce two color values (2 1=2), and a bit depth of 2 can produce 4 color values (2 2 = 4).
Bit depth ranges between 1 and 64 bits per pixel (bpp) and determines the color depth of an image.
An image composed of grids of pixels or dots.
See also vector graphic.
A brightness value that is considered black in a bitmap image. In Corel PHOTO-PAINT, you can set the black point to improve the contrast of an image. For example, in a histogram of an image, with a brightness scale of 0 (dark) to 255 (light), if you set the black point at 5, all pixels with a value greater than 5 are converted to black.
A 1-bit color mode that stores images as two solid colors — black and white — with no gradations. This color mode is useful for line art and simple graphics. To create a black-and-white photo effect, you can use the grayscale color mode.
See also grayscale.
The part of the printed image that extends beyond the edge of the page. The bleed ensures that the final image goes right to the edge of the paper after binding and trimming.
An effect created by transforming one object into another through a progression of shapes and colors.
An indicator for marking an address on the Internet.
The invisible box indicated by the eight selection handles surrounding a selected object.
The amount of light that is transmitted or reflected from a given pixel. In the HSB color mode, brightness is a measure of how much white a color contains. For example, a brightness value of 0 produces black (or shadow in photos), and a brightness value of 255 produces white (or highlight in photos).
The angle that controls the orientation of a pen to the drawing surface, like the slant of the nib on a calligraphy pen. A line drawn at the calligraphic angle has little or no thickness, but widens as its angle gets farther from the calligraphic angle.
An extension to HTML that allows styles such as color, font, and size to be specified for parts of a hypertext document. Style information can be shared by multiple HTML files.
See also HTML.
The point around which an object rotates.
An external application that is executed by an HTTP server in response to an action you perform in a web browser, such as clicking a link, image, or another interactive element of a webpage.
A letter, number, punctuation mark, or other symbol.
A color style created as a shade of another color style. For most of the available color models and palettes, child colors share the same hue as the parent, but have different saturation and brightness levels.
See also parent color.
In commercial printing, a form of trapping created by extending the background object into the foreground object.
Ready-made images that can be imported into Corel applications and edited if required.
An area that is used to temporarily store cut or copied information. The information is stored until new information is cut or copied to the Clipboard, replacing the old.
A copy of an object or an area of an image that is linked to a master object or image area. Most changes made to the master are automatically applied to its clones.
See also symbol.
An object defined by a path whose start point and end point are connected.
A path whose start point and end point are connected.
A color tint that often occurs in photos as a result of lighting conditions or other factors. For example, taking a photo indoors in dim incandescent light can result in a yellow color cast, and taking a photo outdoors in bright sunlight can result in a blue color cast.
The maximum number of colors an image can contain. Color depth is determined by the bit depth of an image and the displaying monitor. For example, an 8-bit image can contain up to 256 colors, while a 24-bit image can contain roughly up to 16 million colors. A GIF image is an example of an 8-bit image; a JPEG image is an example of a 24-bit image.
control object or control group
An object or a group of objects to which a special effect, such as an extrusion, blend, drop shadow, or contour, is applied. You can edit the control object or group by changing its shape, color or position or by applying a transformation, thus modifying the overall appearance of the special effect.
With blends, the start and end objects of the blend are the control objects.
A color mode made up of cyan (C), magenta (M), and yellow (Y). This mode is used in the three-color printing process.
A color mode made up of cyan (C), magenta (M), yellow (Y), and black (K). CMYK printing produces true blacks and a wide tonal range. In the CMYK color mode, color values are expressed as percentages; therefore, a value of 100 for an ink means that the ink is applied at full saturation.
A code page is a table in the DOS or Windows operating system that defines which ASCII or ANSI character set is used for displaying text. Different character sets are used for different languages.
An 8-bit grayscale version of an image. Each channel represents one level of color in the image; for example, RGB has three color channels, while CMYK has four. When all the channels are printed together, they produce the entire range of colors in the image.
The range of colors that can be reproduced or perceived by any device. For example, a monitor displays a different color gamut than a printer, making it necessary to manage colors from original images to final output.
A system that defines the number and kind of colors that make up an image. Black-and-white, grayscale, RGB, CMYK, and paletted are examples of color modes.
A simple color chart that defines the range of colors displayed in a color mode. RGB (red, green, blue), CMY (cyan, magenta, yellow), CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black), HSB (hue, saturation, brightness), HLS (hue, lightness, saturation), and CIE L*a*b (Lab) are examples of color models.
A collection of solid colors from which you can choose colors for fills and outlines.
A description of the color-handling capabilities and characteristics of a device.
In commercial printing, the process of splitting colors in a composite image to produce a number of separate grayscale images, one for each primary color in the original image. In the case of a CMYK image, four separations (one for cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) must be made.
In electronic color management, a virtual representation of a device or the color gamut of a color model. The boundaries and contours of a device’s color space are mapped by color management software.
See also color gamut.
A solid-colored patch in a color palette.
A printing term used to describe a method of overlapping colors to compensate for misaligned color separations (misregistration). This method avoids white slivers that appear between adjoining colors on a white page.
See also spread, choke, and overprinting.
A set of numbers that define a color in a color mode. For example, in the RGB color mode, color values of 255 for red (R) and zero for both green (G) and blue (B) result in the color red.
An object created by combining two or more objects and converting them into a single curve object. A combined object takes on the fill and outline attributes of the last selected object. Sections where an even number of objects overlapped have no fill. Sections where an odd number of objects overlapped are filled. The outlines of the original objects remain visible.
Predefined shapes, such as basic shapes, arrows, stars, and callouts. Common Shapes often have glyphs, which let you modify their appearance.
A blend created by blending the start or end object of one blend with another object.
Hollowed or rounded inward like the inside of a bowl.
The object or objects that appear inside a container object when you apply PowerClip effects.
This term is also used to describe graphics resources included with the product such as clipart, photos, symbols, fonts, and objects.
A key you hold to constrain drawing and editing to a shape or at an angle. The default key is Ctrl. You can change the default key to Shift, the Windows standard, on the Pick tool page of the Options dialog box.
An effect created by adding evenly spaced concentric shapes inside or outside the borders of an object. This effect can also be used for creating cuttable outlines for devices, such as plotters, engraving machines, and vinyl cutters.
The difference in tone between the dark and light areas of an image. Higher contrast values indicate greater differences and fewer gradations between dark and light.
The original object used to create effects such as envelopes, extrusions, drop shadows, contours, and objects created with the Artistic media tool. Changes made to the control object control the appearance of the effect.
The handles that extend from a node along a curve that is being edited with the Shape tool. Control handles determine the angle at which the curve passes through the node.
Curved or rounded outwards like the exterior of a sphere or circle.
To cut unwanted areas of an image without affecting the resolution of the part that remains.
An object that has nodes and control handles, which you can manipulate to change the object’s shape. A curve object can be any shape, including a straight or curved line.
A point or corner created where two curves meet.
The area in a drawing where you can experiment and create objects for future use. This area is outside the borders of the drawing page. You can drag objects from the desktop area to the drawing page when you decide to use them.
A type of color space and device color model. This color space is multi-component, allowing color to be defined by other than the standard set of three (RGB) and four (CMYK) color components.
An accent mark above, below, or through a written character; for example, the acute (é) and cedilla (ç) accents.
A line that displays the size of objects or the distance or angle between objects.
A process used to simulate a greater number of colors when only a limited number of colors are available.
A series of evenly spaced horizontal and vertical lines that are used to help draw and arrange objects.
The area at the bottom of the application window that contains controls for moving between pages and adding pages. The document navigator also displays the page number of the active page.
A measure of a printer’s resolution in dots per inch. Typical desktop laser printers print at 600 dpi. Imagesetters print at 1270 or 2540 dpi. Printers with higher dpi capabilities produce smoother and cleaner output. The term dpi is also used to measure scanning resolution and to indicate bitmap resolution.
A document you create in CorelDRAW.
The portion of a drawing window enclosed by a rectangle with a shadow effect.
The portion of the application window on which you can create, add, and edit objects.
A three-dimensional shadow effect that gives objects a realistic appearance.
An image in the duotone color mode is an 8-bit grayscale image that has been enhanced with one to four additional colors.
Temporary guidelines that appear from the following snap points in objects — center, node, quadrant, and text baseline.
The process of placing an object created in one application into a document created in a different application. Embedded objects are included entirely in the current document; they are not linked to their source files.
Determines the character set of text, letting you correctly display text in the appropriate language.
A closed shape that can be placed around an object to change the object’s shape. An envelope consists of segments connected by nodes. After an envelope has been placed around an object, the nodes can be moved to change the shape of the object.
A photographic term referring to the amount of light used to create an image. If not enough light is permitted to interact with the sensor (in a digital camera) or film (in a traditional camera), the image appears too dark (underexposed). If too much light is permitted to interact with the sensor or film, the image appears too light (overexposed).
A feature that lets you apply a three-dimensional perspective by projecting lines from an object to create the illusion of depth.
The level of sharpness along the edges of a drop shadow.
A color, bitmap, fountain, or pattern applied to an area of an image.
An application that translates digital information from one form to another.
A bitmap with no background. Floating objects are also referred to as photo objects or cutout images.
A set of characters with a single style (such as italic), weight (such as bold), and size (such as 10 point) for a typeface such as Times New Roman.
A smooth progression of two or more colors applied to an area of an image that follow a linear, radial, conical, or square path. Two-color fountain fills have a direct progression from one color to another, while custom fills may have a progression of many colors.
The shades of color that make up the appearance of a fountain fill. The more steps in a fill, the smoother the transition from the beginning color to the end color.
To marquee select objects or nodes while dragging the Shape tool and controlling the shape of the marquee box enclosure as if you were drawing a freehand line.
See also marquee select.
A method of moving files between two computers. Many Internet sites have established repositories of material that can be accessed by using FTP.
A graphic file format designed to use a minimum of disk space and be easily exchanged between computers. This format is commonly used to publish images of 256 or fewer colors to the Internet.
Diamond-shaped handles that can be dragged to alter the form of a shape.
A typographic glyph corresponds to a single character of a typeface.
The area of a command bar that can be dragged. Dragging the grab area moves the bar, while dragging any other area of the bar has no effect. The location of the grab area depends on the operating system you are using, the orientation of the bar, and whether the bar is docked or undocked. Command bars with grab areas include toolbars, the toolbox, and the property bar.
A color mode that displays images by using 256 shades of gray. Each color is defined as a value between 0 and 255, where 0 is darkest (black) and 255 is lightest (white). Grayscale images, especially photos, are commonly referred to as "black and white."
A method of representing text by using either words that have no meaning or a series of straight lines.
A series of evenly spaced horizontal and vertical lines that are used to help draw and arrange objects.
See also document grid.
A set of objects that behave as one unit. Operations you perform on a group apply equally to each of its objects.
A horizontal, vertical, or slanted line that can be placed anywhere in the drawing window to aid in object placement.
The space between columns of text, also called the alley. In printing, the white space formed by the inside margins of two facing pages.
An image that has been converted from a continuous tone image to a series of dots of various sizes to represent different tones.
A set of eight black squares that appear at the corners and sides of an object when the object is selected. By dragging individual handles, you can scale, resize, or mirror the object. If you click a selected object, the shape of the handles changes to arrows so that you can rotate and skew the object.
highlight, shadow, and midtone
Terms used to describe the brightness of pixels in a bitmap image. Brightness values range from 0 (dark) to 255 (light). Pixels in the first third of the range are considered shadows, pixels in the middle third of the range are considered midtones, and pixels in the last third of the range are considered highlights. You can lighten or darken specific areas in images by adjusting the highlights, shadows, or midtones. A histogram is an excellent tool for viewing and evaluating the highlights, shadows, and midtones of images.
A histogram consists of a horizontal bar chart that plots the brightness values of the pixels in your bitmap image on a scale from 0 (dark) to 255 (light). The left part of the histogram represents the shadows of an image, the middle part represents the midtones, and the right part represents the highlights. The height of the spikes indicates the number of pixels at each brightness level. For example, a large number of pixels in the shadows (the left side of the histogram) indicates the presence of image detail in the dark areas of the image.
The area of an object that you can click to jump to the address specified by a URL.
The process of adding data to objects or groups of objects so that they respond to events, such as pointing or clicking. For example, you can assign a URL to an object, making it a hyperlink to an external website.
The distance from the right margin at which hyphenation begins.
HSB (hue, saturation, brightness)
A color model that defines three components: hue, saturation, and brightness. Hue determines color (yellow, orange, red, and so on); brightness determines perceived intensity (lighter or darker color); and saturation determines color depth (from dull to intense).
The World Wide Web authoring standard comprised of markup tags that define the structure and components of a document. The tags are used to tag text and integrate resources (such as images, sound, video, and animation) when you create a webpage.
The property of a color that allows it to be classified by its name. For example, blue, green, and red are all hues.
An electronic link that provides access directly from one place in a document to another place in that document or to another document.
A pictorial representation of a tool, object, file, or other application item.
A stroke that you make as you sketch with the LiveSketch tool. Input strokes are adjusted and converted to Bézier curves based on the time and distance between them.
A graphic in an HTML document that contains clickable areas that link to locations on the World Wide Web, to other HTML documents, or to graphics.
The number of pixels per inch in a bitmap measured in ppi (pixels per inch) or dpi (dots per inch). Low resolutions can result in a grainy appearance of the bitmap; high resolutions can produce smoother images but result in larger file sizes.
A high-resolution device that creates film or film-based paper output used in the production of plates for printing presses.
To import and place a photo image, clipart object, or sound file into a drawing.
Intensity is a measure of the brightness of the light pixels in a bitmap compared with the darker midtones and dark pixels. An increase in intensity increases the vividness of whites while maintaining true darks.
In GIF images, a method that lets you display a web-based image on the screen at a low, blocky resolution. As the image data loads, the image quality improves.
The point at which one line crosses another.
A scripting language used on the web to add interactive functions to HTML pages.
A format for photographic images that offers compression with some loss of image quality. Because of their compression (up to 20 to 1) and small file size, JPEG images are widely used in Internet publishing.
An improved version of the JPEG file format that features better compression and allows you to attach image information and assign a different compression rate to an image area.
To modify the spacing between characters and words so that the edges on the left, right, or both margins of a block of text are even.
The space between characters, and the adjustment of that space. Often, kerning is used to place two characters closer together than usual, for example WA, AW, TA, or VA. Kerning increases readability and makes letters appear balanced and proportional, especially at larger font sizes.
A printing term that refers to an area where underlying colors have been removed so that only the top color prints. For example, if you print a small circle on a large circle, the area under the small circle is not printed. This ensures that the color used for the small circle remains true instead of overlapping and mixing with the color used for the large circle.
A color model that contains a luminance (or lightness) component (L) and two chromatic components: "a" (green to red) and "b" (blue to yellow).
A transparent plane on which you can place objects in a drawing.
A row of characters placed between text objects to help the reader follow a line across white space. Leader tabs are often used in place of tab stops, especially before text that is flush right such as in a list or table of contents.
The spacing between lines of text. Leading is important for both readability and appearance.
The process of placing an object created in one application into a document created in a different application. A linked object remains connected with its source file. If you want to change a linked object in a file, you have to modify the source file.
A collection of symbol definitions that are included in a CorelDRAW (CDR) file. To share a library between drawings, you can export it to the Corel Symbol Library (CSL) file format.
A character consisting of two or more letters joined together.
The level of brightness that is shared between a transparency and the object to which it is applied. For example, if a transparency is applied to an object whose color appears bright, the transparency color takes on a comparable brightness. The same is true for a transparency that is applied to an object whose color appears dark — the transparency takes on a comparable darkness.
A kind of file compression that maintains the quality of an image that has been compressed and decompressed.
A kind of file compression that results in noticeable degradation of image quality.
A lossless file compression technique that results in smaller file size and faster processing time. LZW compression is commonly used on GIF and TIFF files.
To select objects or nodes by dragging the Pick tool or Shape tool diagonally and enclosing objects in a marquee box with a dotted outline.
An object that has been cloned. Most changes you make to the master object are automatically applied to the clone.
A layer on a master page whose objects appear on every page of a multipage drawing. A master page can have more than one master layer.
A virtual page that contains global objects, guidelines, and grid settings that apply to all pages in your document.
A type of fill that lets you add patches of color to the inside of a selected object.
Information about an object or a file. Examples of metadata include: title, name, tags, keywords, comments.
To move an object in small increments.
See also nudge and super nudge.
The point of a Bézier line that divides it into two parts of equal length.
A value that determines when two lines that meet at a sharp angle switch from a pointed (mitered) joint to a squared-off (beveled) joint.
The visual effect of radiating curves created by superimposing two regular patterns. For example, a moiré pattern can result from overlapping two halftone screens of different angles, dot spacing, and dot size. Moiré patterns are the undesirable result of rescreening an image with a different halftone screen or with the same halftone screen on an angle different from the original.
To select multiple objects by using the Pick tool, or multiple nodes by using the Shape tool.
A group of two or more groups that behaves as one object.
Containers that hold other containers to form complex PowerClip objects.
The square points at each end of a line or curve segment. You can change the shape of a line or curve by dragging one or more of its nodes.
In bitmap editing, random pixels on the surface of a bitmap, resembling static on a television screen.
Items that appear on the screen but do not print. They include the rulers, guidelines, table gridlines, hidden text, and formatting symbols, such as spaces, hard returns, tabs, and indents.
To move an object in increments.
See also micro nudge and super nudge.
A generic term for any item you create or place in a drawing. Objects include lines, shapes, graphics, and text.
An effect created by lengthening or shortening one side of an object to create the impression that the object is receding from view in one direction.
The quality of an object that makes it difficult to see through. If an object is 100 percent opaque, you cannot see through it. Opacity levels under 100 percent increase the transparency of objects.
See also transparency.
An object defined by a path whose start point and end point are not connected.
The point in the drawing window at which the rulers intersect.
The number of dots per inch (dpi) that an output device, such as an imagesetter or laser printer, produces.
The line that defines the shape of an object.
Excessive light in an image that gives it a washed-out appearance.
See also exposure.
Overprinting is achieved by printing one color over another. Depending on the colors you choose, the overprinted colors mix to create a new color, or the top color covers the bottom color. Overprinting a dark color on a light color is often used to avoid registration problems that occur when color separations are not precisely aligned.
See also color trapping, choke, and spread.
An 8-bit color mode that displays images of up to 256 colors. You can convert a complex image to the paletted color mode to reduce file size and to achieve more precise control of the colors used throughout the conversion process.
To move the drawing page around in the drawing window. Panning changes the page view in the same way that scrolling moves the drawing up, down, to the left, or to the right in the drawing window. When working at high magnification levels where not all of the drawing is displayed, you can quickly pan to see parts of the drawing that were previously hidden.
A feature that lets you choose a substitute font if you open a file that contains a font not installed on your computer. You can make a substitution for the current working session only, or you can make a permanent substitution, so that the new font is automatically displayed when you save and reopen the file.
The colors that are available through the PANTONE Process Color System, which is based on the CMYK color model.
A text type that allows you to apply formatting options and directly edit large blocks of text.
An original color style that you can save and apply to objects in a drawing. You can create child colors from the parent color.
See also child color.
The basic component from which objects are constructed. A path can be open (for example, a line) or closed (for example, a circle), and it can be made up of a single line or curve segment or many joined segments.
A fill consisting of a series of repeating vector objects or images.
A line that intersects another line at a right angle.
A colored dot that is the smallest part of a bitmap.
See also resolution.
PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
A graphic file format designed for use in online viewing. This format can import 24-bit color graphics.
A unit of measure used primarily in typesetting to define type sizes. There are approximately 72 points to an inch and 12 points to a pica.
A type of texture fill designed using the PostScript language.
A way of arranging objects that lets you contain one object inside another.
An object created by placing objects (contents objects) inside other objects (container objects). If the contents object is larger than the container object, the contents object is automatically cropped. Only the contents that fit inside the container object are visible.
A stylus that you can use to access commands and draw your images. To use with CorelDRAW, you must install the pressure-sensitive pen, along with a pressure-sensitive tablet and its corresponding drivers.
In commercial printing, colors that are produced from a blend of cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. This is different from a spot color, which is a solid ink color printed individually (one printing plate is required for each spot color).
In JPEG images, a method of having the image appear on screen in its entirety, at a low, blocky resolution. As the image data loads, the image quality progressively improves.
A feature that automatically displays the fully worded form for abbreviations or the correct form for errors as you type. You can use QuickCorrect to capitalize words or to correct common spelling and typographic errors automatically; for example, QuickCorrect can replace "asap" with "as soon as possible" and "hte" with "the."
As applied to the Dust & Scratch filter, sets the number of pixels surrounding the damaged area that are used to apply the filter.
A paletted color mode option that lets you specify a focus color for the paletted conversion. You can adjust the color and specify its importance to guide converting.
An image that has been rendered into pixels. When you convert vector graphic files to bitmap files, you create rasterized images.
To capture a two-dimensional image from a three-dimensional model.
To change the resolution and dimensions of a bitmap. Upsampling increases the size of the image; downsampling decreases the size of the image. Resampling with fixed resolution lets you maintain the resolution of the image by adding or subtracting pixels while varying the image size. Resampling with variable resolution keeps the number of pixels unchanged while changing the image size, resulting in lower or higher resolution than that of the original image.
The amount of detail that an image file contains, or that an input, output, or display device is capable of producing. Resolution is measured in dpi (dots per inch) or ppi (pixels per inch). Low resolutions can result in a grainy appearance; high resolutions can produce higher quality images but result in larger file sizes.
Rich text supports text formatting, such as bold, italics, and underlining, as well as different fonts, font sizes, and colored text. Rich text documents can also include page formatting options, such as custom page margins, line spacing, and tab widths.
A color mode in which the three colors of light (red, green, and blue) are combined in varying intensities to produce all other colors. A value between 0 and 255 is assigned to each channel of red, green, and blue. Monitors, scanners, and the human eye use RGB to produce or detect color.
An interactive object or group of objects that changes its appearance when you click or point to it.
The conversion of a document saved in one file format, such as Portable Document Format (PDF), to another format, such as Corel DESIGNER (DES) and then back again.
To reposition and reorient an object by turning it around its center of rotation.
A horizontal or vertical bar marked off in units and used to determine the size and position of objects. By default, the rulers appear on the left side and along the top of the application window, but they can be hidden or moved.
The purity or vividness of a color, expressed as the absence of white. A color that has 100 percent saturation contains no white. A color with 0 percent saturation is a shade of gray.
To change an object’s horizontal and vertical dimensions proportionally by a specified percentage. For example, scaling a rectangle that is 1 inch high and 2 inches wide by 150 percent results in a rectangle that is 1.5 inches high and 3 inches wide. The aspect ratio of 1:2 (height to width) is maintained.
The color of the first pixel that you click when you define a mask. This color is used by the tolerance value to set the sensitivity of the color detection in color masks.
The line or curve between nodes in a curve object.
An invisible rectangle with eight visible handles that appears around any object you select using the Pick tool.
The ability to recognize and convert hand-drawn shapes into perfect forms. To take advantage of shape recognition, you must use the Smart drawing tool. For example, you can draw four pen strokes to sketch a rectangle, and the application will convert your hand-drawn lines into a perfect rectangle.
An outline view of a drawing that hides fills, extrusions, contours, and intermediate blend shapes. Bitmaps are displayed in monochrome.
See also wireframe view.
To change an object’s horizontal and vertical dimensions proportionally by changing one of the dimensions. For example, a rectangle with a height of 1 inch and a width of 2 inches can be sized by changing the value of the height to 1.5 inches. A width of 3 inches automatically results from the new height value. The aspect ratio of 1:2 (height to width) is maintained.
To slant an object vertically, horizontally, or both.
To force an object that is being drawn or moved to align automatically to a point on the grid, a guideline, or another object.
The object you use to perform a shaping action on another object, such as welding, trimming, or intersecting. The source object receives the fill and outline attributes of the target object.
See also target object.
The screen that appears when CorelDRAW starts. It monitors the progress of the startup process and provides information about copyright and registration.
A single blend that is broken into two or more components to create a compound blend. The object where the blend is split becomes the end object for one component of the blend and start object for the other.
In commercial printing, a solid ink color that prints individually, one plate per spot color.
In commercial printing, a type of trap that is created by extending the foreground object into the background object.
A set of attributes that controls the appearance of a specific type of object. There are three style types: graphic styles, text styles (artistic and paragraph), and color styles.
A pen device, used in conjunction with a pen tablet, that allows you to draw paint strokes. A pressure-sensitive stylus allows you to vary your strokes with subtle changes in pressure.
Subpaths are the basic curves and shapes from which a single curve object is constructed.
Text characters that are positioned below the baseline of the other characters in a line of text.
A color model, such as CMYK, that creates color by subtracting wavelengths of light reflected from an object. For example, a colored ink appears blue if it absorbs all colors except blue.
To move an object in large increments by pressing Shift and an Arrow key. The super nudge value is multiplied by the nudge value to obtain the distance by which the object is moved.
See also nudge and micro nudge.
Text characters that are positioned above the baseline of the other characters in a line of text.
Hard drive space used by applications to artificially increase the amount of memory available in your computer.
One of a series of solid-colored patches used as a sample when selecting color. A printed booklet of swatches is called a swatchbook. Swatch also refers to the colors contained in the color palette.
A reusable object or group of objects. A symbol is defined once and can be referenced many times in a drawing.
An occurrence of a symbol in a drawing. A symbol instance automatically inherits any changes made to the symbol. You can also apply unique properties to each instance, including size, position, and uniform transparency.
A straight line that touches a curve or an ellipse at a point, but does not cross the curve or ellipse at that point.
The object you perform a shaping action on, such as welding, trimming, or intersecting with another object. The target object retains its fill and outline attributes while copying these attributes to the source objects used to perform the action.
See also source object.
A way of describing light in terms of degrees Kelvin — lower values correspond to dim lighting conditions that cause an orange cast, such as candlelight or the light from an incandescent light bulb. Higher values correspond to intense lighting conditions that cause a blue cast, such as sunlight.
A predefined set of information that sets the page size, orientation, ruler position, and grid and guideline information. A template may also include graphics and text that can be modified.
The imaginary horizontal line that text characters appear to be placed on.
The rectangle that appears as a series of dashed lines around a block of paragraph text created using the Text tool.
A set of attributes that controls the appearance of text. There are two text style types: artistic text styles and paragraph text styles.
A fractally generated fill that, by default, fills an object or image area with one image instead of with a series of repeating images.
A level of tolerance for tonal variation in a bitmap.
A miniature, low-resolution version of an image or illustration.
Invisible divisions to which your pointer gravitates.
The technique of repeating a small image across a large surface. Tiling is often used to create a patterned background for webpages.
In photo editing, a tint often refers to a semitransparent color applied over an image. Also called a color cast.
In printing, a tint refers to a lighter shade of a color created with halftone screening — for example, a spot color.
See also halftone.
The distribution of pixels in a bitmap image from dark (a value of zero, indicating no brightness) to light (a value of 255, indicating full brightness). Pixels in the first third of the range are considered shadows, pixels in the middle third of the range are considered midtones, and pixels in the last third of the range are considered highlights. Ideally, the pixels in an image should be distributed across the entire tonal range. A histogram is an excellent tool for viewing and evaluating the tonal range of images.
The variations in a color or the range of grays between black and white.
The quality of an object that makes it easy to see through. Setting lower levels of transparency causes higher levels of opacity and less visibility of the underlying items or image.
See also opacity.
See color trapping.
A font specification developed by Apple. TrueType fonts print the way they appear on the screen and can be resized to any height.
By using the TWAIN driver supplied by the manufacturer of the imaging hardware, Corel graphics applications can acquire images directly from a digital camera or scanner.
An effect created by lengthening or shortening two sides of an object to create the impression that the object is receding from view in two directions.
Insufficient light in an image.
See also exposure.
A type of fill used to apply one solid color to your image.
See also fill.
A character encoding standard that defines character sets for all written languages in the world by using a 16-bit code set and more than 65, 000 characters. Unicode lets you handle text effectively regardless of the language of the text, your operating system, or the application you are using.
URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
A unique address that defines where a webpage is located on the Internet.
A marker that appears when you select an extrusion or an object to which perspective has been added. With an extrusion, the vanishing point marker indicates the depth (parallel extrusion) or the point at which the extruded surfaces would meet if extended (perspective extrusion). In both cases, the vanishing point is indicated by an X.
An image generated from mathematical descriptions that determine the position, length, and direction in which lines are drawn. Vector graphics are created as collections of lines rather than as patterns of individual dots or pixels.
See also bitmap.
A specific object within a drawing that is created as a collection of lines rather than as patterns of individual dots or pixels. Vector objects are generated from mathematical descriptions that determine the position, length, and direction in which lines are drawn.
A small amount of random noise added to the luminance component of the image pixels which carries information about the image. This information survives normal editing, printing, and scanning.
To combine two objects into a single curve object with a single outline. A source object is welded to a target object to create a new object that takes on the fill and outline attributes of the target object.
The measurement of white on a color monitor that influences how highlights and contrast appear.
In image correction, the white point determines the brightness value that is considered white in a bitmap image. In Corel PHOTO-PAINT, you can set the white point to improve the contrast of an image. For example, in a histogram of an image, with a brightness scale of 0 (dark) to 255 (light), if you set the white point at 250, all pixels with a value greater than 250 are converted to white.
Windows Image Acquisition (WIA)
A standard interface and driver, created by Microsoft, for loading images from peripheral devices, such as scanners and digital cameras.
An outline view of a drawing that hides fills but displays extrusions, contour lines, and intermediate blend shapes. Bitmaps are displayed in monochrome.
See also simple wireframe view.
A configuration of settings that specifies how the various command bars, commands, and buttons are arranged when you open the application.
To reduce or magnify the view of a drawing. You can zoom in to see details or zoom out for a broader view.
A lossless file compression technique that results in smaller file size and faster processing time.
The features documented in the Help are available in the full version of CorelDRAW Graphics Suite 2021. Some features may not be available in this version of the product.