Adobe Creative Cloud All-in-One For Dummies. Christopher Smith

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Adobe Creative Cloud All-in-One For Dummies - Christopher  Smith


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THIS CHAPTER

      

Discovering common menus and dialog boxes

      

Addressing Creative Cloud alerts

      

Working with common menu options

      

Understanding contextual menus

      

Speeding up your workflow with shortcuts

      

Changing preferences

      When you work in Adobe CC, you may notice that many menus, commands, and keyboard shortcuts are similar across the applications. These similarities can help you migrate more easily from one application to another. This chapter provides an overview of some of the common menus, dialog boxes, options, shortcuts, and preferences that exist in most or all of the applications in Adobe Creative Cloud.

      When you work with applications in Adobe Creative Cloud, you may notice that many of the menus on the main menu bar are the same. Similar functionality makes finding important features easy, even when you’re completely new to the software.

       File: Contains many features that control the overall document, such as creating, opening, saving, printing, and setting general properties for the document. The File menu may also include options for importing or exporting data into or from the current document.

       Edit: Contains options and commands for editing the current document. Commands include copying, pasting, and selecting as well as options for opening preferences and setting dialog boxes that are used to control parts of the document. Commands for spell-checking are also common parts of the Edit menu.

       Type: Contains options related to type and typesetting, such as font selection, size, leading, and more.

       View: Contains options for changing the level of magnification of the document. The View menu also sometimes includes options for viewing the workspace in different ways; showing rules, grids, or guides; and turning alignment snapping on and off. Snapping helps with precise placement of selection edges, cropping marquees, slices, shapes, and paths.

       Window: Contains options primarily used to open or close whatever panels are available in the application. You can also choose how to view the workspace and save a favorite arrangement of the workspace.

       Help: Contains the option to open the Help documentation that’s included with the application. This menu may also include information about updating the software, registration, and tutorials.

      Each application has additional application-specific menus determined by the needs of the software. For example, you can use the Photoshop Image menu to resize the image or document, rotate the canvas, and duplicate the image, among other functions. InDesign has a Layout menu you can use to navigate the document, edit page numbering, and access controls for creating and editing the document’s table of contents; we discuss these menus where appropriate throughout this book.

Snapshot of Menus in Photoshop let you choose and control different options.

      FIGURE 4-1: Menus in Photoshop let you choose and control different options.

      A dialog box is a window that appears when certain menu items are selected. It offers additional options in the form of drop-down lists, panes, text fields, checkboxes, and buttons that enable you to change settings and enter information or data as necessary. You use dialog boxes to control the software or your document in various ways. For example, when you open a new file, you typically use the Open dialog box to select a file to open. When you save a file, you use the Save As dialog box to select a location for saving the file, to name the file, and to execute the Save command.

Snapshot of using a dialog box to change filter settings.

      FIGURE 4-2: Using a dialog box to change filter settings.

       Save a new version of a file

       Apply a filter to a selection

       Specify printing or page-setup options

       Set up preferences for the software you’re using

       Check the spelling of text in a document

       Open a new document

      

You cannot use the application you’re working in until the dialog box is closed. Make sure to close the dialog box after you are finished making your changes. Close the dialog box by clicking a button (such as Save or OK) when you’re finished or by clicking the Cancel button to close it without making any changes.

Snapshot of a simple choice: OK or cancel.

      FIGURE 4-3: A simple choice: OK or cancel.

      

You can sometimes use
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