Where I can find tutorial to making text animation like this?. Or maybe a tutorial for After Effects?. It's a falling text animation using after effects.
The original text is "Be sure you are there. Don't miss it".
The text display on center screen and then animate with falling down by random characters.
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I've been trying to find some info on how to fix this, but I'm clearly typing the wrong stuff into google.
Basically imagine you have canvas in Photoshop.
You press the brush tool to paint a horizontal red line with your Wacom pen.
But instead of painting a red horizontal line, the screen pans to the right.
No red line, just moved the slider over to see the right of the screen.
I don't want that. I want to paint. I don't want to move the slider.
Also - every time I hold down the pen, a little dialog pops up that lets me change the brush settings. I don't want that either. If I hold the pen harder on the tablet, I'm trying to push down to make the stroke thicker. But instead of a thicker stroke, I get brush settings.
WTF Wacom?
Last Windows update caused this. Here's how to fix this: https://forums.adobe.com/thread/2398372
I'm building a set of slides with bullets. I want to use "appearance" animations so I can step through the bullets with the space bar. On several slides, I have a screenshot image that I've positioned right after the bullet I want the image to be associated with. However, when I add appearance animations, the slide just displays all the screenshot images immediately, before any of the bullets appear. It seems like PowerPoint treats the images as "floating", and not associated with the bullets.
What can I do here?
The fact that the screenshot image is near the bullet doesn't make it part of the bullet or associated text, so it's behaving as expected.
Instead, try using a custom picture bullet for the text or using individual lines of text, each grouped with the screenshot image and each animated individually.
I want to export certain shapes in powerpoint as images. For that I am using the following code:
ActivePresentation.Slides(1).Shapes(3).Export "C:\dink_template\created_files\testimg.jpg", ppShapeFormatJPG
I also tried with other image formats:
ActivePresentation.Slides(1).Shapes(3).Export "C:\dink_template\created_files\testimg.png", ppShapeFormatPNG
and I get this image:
Here you cannot notice because the white peace that appears in the image button (and also a bit in the top) is mixing with the page but if you make inspect element on the photo you will see it.
As you can see in this other image in powerpoint the shape fix perfectly and it is not bigger that the image:
Why is appearing this white peace in the top and in the button? How can I export the image without them?
EDIT
I know when it is happening. Because I try with other ones and sometimes they where not appearing and sometime it was. The problem is that when the text you write in the shape is so close to the border and you export it as image it export with this white space. Now the question is... how can I solve this?
One option would be to adjust the size of your shape and/or the size of the text accordingly to the total text length, before exporting it as an image, in order to make sure that your text will never be too close to the border...
Something else: have you checked the margins properties of your shape? Putting them to 0 might help a bit.
I am trying to build a windows phone live tile. I want some text on the tile that is the accent colour. What this means is that I need to draw some text on the tile that is transparent. I don't seem to be able to write in the transparent colour.
I have a User Control which is 173 by 173 pixels which I save as a png file. I use this png as the image for the live tile. The transparent bits of the image come out in the current accent colour.
Any ideas how to write in the transparent colour in xaml?
This behaviour is to be expected. In your original question you are effectively saying "Write invisible text on top of the image", and that's what you're getting (imagine writing in invisible ink on a photograph). You effectively need to do one of two things.
1) Figure out which pixels are part of the text you're writing, and "remove" them from the image so the background colour shows through, or
2) Write text in the background colour ({StaticResource PhoneAccentBrush})
EDIT
You can probably achieve what you need using an Opacity Mask. Apologies for only providing that as a link as I haven't done this myself.
I'd like to create statusbar with text effect like in Safari or iTunes, i.e. recessed text.
However, if I simply add shadow in Interface Builder using Core Animation panel, OS X's worst text rendering kicks in:
What's the trick to get recessed text on a label and keep proper subpixel rendering?
There is a built-in way to do this:
[[yourTextField cell] setBackgroundStyle:NSBackgroundStyleRaised];
It's a cheap old trick: You draw the text in white at an offset and then draw the black text on top of it.
There is a hook for shadows in the text-drawing system, NSAttributedString's NSShadowAttributeName. But testing this out, it appears to kill the subpixel antialiasing as well.