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PSP XI Tips & Tricks
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dot 161 Removing PSP XI From Your Personal Computer
To totally remove PSP XI from your computer due to problems of any kind, use the ZapPS program found here:

ftp://ftp.corel.com/pub/PaintShopPro/X/zapps.exe

To use this program, exit PSP, run the program, choose Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI from the Product drop-down menu, and under Actions, add a checkmark next to all four options (Uninstall, Run MSI Zap, Remove Registry Keys, and Remove Installed Files), and then click Begin:

ZapPS utility

ZapPS does an excellent job of totally removing PSP from your system - much more completely than using the Control Panel's Add or Remove programs. It is the best way to remove PSP from your system, and the way most often suggested by Corel technicians when you call for help. And you don't have to worry about your personal files - ZapPS will not remove any of your personal files in the My PSP Files or a similar folder.

ZapPS does, however, leave some litter behind, which you may wish to remove:

  1. Folders - the location of these folders may vary in different installations. Use a Windows Search to find folders of similar names on your system:
    • The MS Installer files from an ESD installation: C:\Program Files\Corel\Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI - Installation Files.
    • The PSP XI cache files: C:\Documents and Settings\user_name\Application Data\Corel\Paint Shop Pro Photo\11\Cache.
    • If PSP XI was your only Corel product, an empty folder: C:\Program Files\Corel - for those who performed an ESD installation, this folder may contain the Python Libraries folder.
    • An empty folder: C:\Documents and Settings\user_name\Local Settings\Temp\ Temp Files (this folder name is the same as that listed in File Locations for Undo/Temporary Files).
    • A Start Menu entry: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs\PSP XI
  2. Registry entries - several minor registry entries may be left behind by the install, keys containing either Paint Shop Pro XI or PaintShopProXI or PaintShopProPhotoXI.
    Note: I do not recommend editing the Windows Registry unless you are very comfortable with the process. If done incorrectly, this process may cause your PC to become unstable and even unbootable. If you decide to edit the Registry, all the usual precautions apply, including making a backup of the Registry first. The leftover registry keys take up little space and may not be worth the trouble for you.


dot 162 Filling Whole Areas of an Image With the Background Color
One way to fill whole areas of a flattened image with a color is to select the areas you want filled, make the color you want those areas filled with the Background color, and choose Edit...Clear (or hit the Delete key) - the selected area(s) will be flooded with the Background color. The background color is always used in this process, even if a gradient or pattern is selected in the Background Material box.


dot 163 Keeping Square Corners on Expanded Selections
If you want to keep the corners of a selection square when you expand the selection, use either of the following methods:
  1. Use Edit Selection to expand the selection:
    1. After creating the selection, choose Selections...Edit Selection.
    2. Choose Image...Resize ('All layers' UNchecked) or use the Pick tool (K) or the Deform tool (which is still available using its old shortcut key, D, in PSP XI) to increase the size of the selection.
    3. Choose Selections...Edit Selection to return to the selection marquee.
  2. Use Selections...Modify...Expand to expand the selection, and then click on the 'Current selection' button in the 'Create selection from' section of the Selection tool Tool Options palette:

    current selection button
    Note: This method will only work if the selection is a rectangle with sides parallel to the images edges.

In the following image, the selection on the left was expanded 10 pixels using Selections...Modify...Expand. The selection in the center was expanded the same number of pixels using the first method above. The selection on the right was created by applying the second method above directly to the image on the left. All selections were filled with color for visibility. Note the difference in the corners of the expanded, filled selections - either way gives you crisp, square corners:

expanded selections


dot 164 Contacting Corel With Error Reports
If you find errors in PSP XI, or suffer from repeatable failures that you have fully documented and can explain, you can contact Corel by clicking on the E-mail Corel tab at http://support.corel.com. Be sure you include sufficient detail in your report so they can reproduce your error. If they can't reproduce it, they can't fix it.


dot 165 Running Pre-PSP X Text Scripts in PSP XI
Because of the ability new in PSP X to record text using either Points or Pixels, pre-PSP X scripts that write text may not work correctly in PSP XI. This is especially true when extracting text parameters from the Text tool Tool Options palette, and shows up most often if you execute the text script repeatedly, as when making multiple tags. If the resolution of the image is less than 95, the text might grow with each iteration of the script; on the other hand, if the image has a resolution that is greater than 95, the text may shrink with each iteration.

If this is a problem for you, make the following three changes to the problem script:

  1. Change the Host Version in the def ScriptProperties statement at the beginning of the script from whatever it is to "'Host Version': '11.00'". If that parameter is anything other than 10 or 11, PSP will think the text needs to be converted.
    Note: If you subsequently attempt to run this same script in PSP 9, you will received a warning message when the script loads: "This script is from a newer version of Paint Shop Pro or the version could not be determined. You can continue to execute the script, but errors may occur or the script may produce unexpected results.". You can safely ignore this message and click the OK button.
  2. Use the TextEx command and not the Text command. If the script contains the Text command from PSP 8, the system will think your text information needs to be converted, and this is likely to change the size of the text.
  3. If you are extracting Text tool parameters from the Tool Options palette, be sure to set the Units parameter to Pixels:

    units parameter in Text Tool Options palette
Note: Text rendered in PSP X and PSP XI is not always the same size as that rendered in previous versions. You will most likely find the text in PSP X and XI renders smaller than that in previous versions. This is an ongoing, unresolved problem.


dot 166 Loading Newly-Added Plugins Without Restarting PSP
Usually, when you add a plugin to your plugins folders, that plugin does not appear in the Effects menu until PSP is restarted. To cause new plugins to appear in the Effects menu without restarting PSP, choose File...Preferences...File Locations, scroll down to Plug-ins in the File types window on the left, and then do one of the following:
  • Temporarily disable one of the paths that existed when you opened the File Locations dialog by clearing the Enable check box in the 'Plug-in file folders' panel (see blue arrow below), or
  • Change the order of path entries using the up/down arrows in the 'Plug-in file folders' panel (see red arrow below).

    plugins panel if File Locations dialog

When you save this change by clicking the OK button, PSP reloads the Plugins cache file, making your new plugin available without stopping and restarting PSP. You may want to re-open the File Locations dialog and reverse the change you made.


dot 167 Color Management Problems In PSP XI
There is much written about Color Management and whether or not you should have it enabled for PSP. This discussion is far beyond the scope of this document. However, there are viewing problems that occur for some users with PSP X or PSP XI, and this entry will show you two simple ways to correct those problems.

By default, Color Management is enabled in PSP XI. Some users have experienced viewing problems, among which are the following:

  • Green, pick, or purple tint to all images.
  • All photos showing up darker or lighter than with other software, including previous versions of PSP.
  • Images totally black in PSP XI.
  • All blues showing up as purple, including in the Materials palette.
  • Strange edges in drop shadows and blurs.

If these or similar color problems happen to you, there are two simple choices that will rectify the problems:

  1. Choose File...Color Management...Color Management and select the sRGB profile in the Monitor Profile drop-list; OR
  2. Totally disable Color Management by UNchecking the Enable Color Management checkbox in the Color Management dialog.

For further information, you might want to download the Corel Color Management Overview article entitled PSPX Color Management.


dot 168 8-bit vs 16-bit Images
One of the new photo features started in PSP X is support for 16-bit/channel functionality, which lets the user work with thousands of shades per color channel rather than the 256 shades per channel allowed by the 8-bit RGB color model. Before PSP X, PSP was only been able to handle images with 16 million colors. Starting with version X, PSP can handle images containing as many as 281 trillion colors - quite a box of crayons, huh! What this means to the average user is that when you make color and/or brightness corrections, the extra resolution creates far better results. There's so much more resolution to draw on that when you apply effects to a 16-bit image, the results are always much nicer looking. If you start with an 8-bit image and apply the same effects, the resulting image can become grainy or have noticeable banding and/or other artifacts.

To illustrate this graphically, I created an 8-bit image and a 16-bit image, filled both with a gradient, applied the Gaussian Blur effect twice, Unsharp Mask four times, and the Sharpen effect twelve times:

8 bit vs 16 bit images

Though the series of effects applied to these images is not something a person would normally do, the results are amazing, and illustrate the point that applying effects will/can produce radically different results.

Even though PSP X introduced 16-bit/channel color support, not all of PSP X's, nor PSP XI's features support 16-bit images. You can see a complete list of commands, tools, and features that do fully support 16-bit/channel images in the 'What commands and features work with 16-bit per channel color images?' Corel Knowledge Base entry (that KB entry is for PSP X - watch for an updated version for PSP XI). In addition, none of the third-party plugins and filters will work on 16-bit images in PSP X or PSP XI. I expect this might change in the future, though many of these same plugins and filters do not work in the competition's 16-bit processing, either.

The average user who does not have a camera producing 16-bit images, or might be interested in printing such images, can ignore the above discussion. Just thought the comparison was interesting. I neither print my images, nor have a 16-bit image-producing camera.


dot 169 Disabling the Smart Photo Fix Open for Raw Images
If you find that your raw image files are automatically invoking the Smart Photo Fix dialog on open, and you want to disable this, choose File...Preferences...File Format Preferences, click on the General tab, and UNcheck 'Open Camera Raw Images with Smart Photo Fix'.


dot 170 Disabling the Automatic Rotation of Images Using EXIF Data
If you find that your images are automatically rotating on open, and then need to be rotated back to be correct, this could be due to the fact that the EXIF data was not reset by another program which rotated the image. PSP reads the EXIF field that tells whether the camera took the shot in a rotated format, and rotates the image for you based on that EXIF data. Many software packages that rotate images for you do not update that field, so PSP does not know the image has already been rotated.

If you want to disable this automatic rotation by PSP, choose File...Preferences...File Format Preferences, click on the General tab, and UNcheck 'Rotate images automatically upon opening using EXIF data'.


dot 171 Viewing the Selection Marquee While Cropping
When the crop shading area feature is enabled, shading appears outside the crop rectangle, making it easier to see the projected results of your crop. However, if you have a selection marquee active in your image, it disappears as you adjust the crop rectangle, which can be counter-productive. If you want to be able to view the selection marquee at the same time as you adjust the crop rectangle, disable the Crop shading area feature by choosing File...Preferences...General Program Preferences, clicking on Transparency and Shading in the left panel, and UNchecking 'Enable crop shade area' in the Shading panel on the right. You might want to enable this feature again after your crop has been applied.


dot 172 Extracting Color From Any Image
If you want to use a color in PSP that matches something you see on a web site, or on your Windows Desktop, or on the visible screen for any other program, this can easily be done from PSP. To capture the a color like this, you must be able to see both PSP and the application/window from which you want to capture the color. You may need to resize the PSP window.

To capture a color, set your Foreground or Background Material to Color, place your cursor over the Foreground or Background Material box, hold down the CTRL key, move the sampling eye dropper to the area on your screen where you want to capture the color. As you move across the screen, you will see the Sampling Screen tool tip follow the cursor. When you have the color you want in the Sampling Screen color box, left-click to capture the color:

sampling screen color capture


dot 173 Removing PSP Installation Files
Some installations of PSP leave behind a whopping chunk of installation files. These are left to assist in repairing the installation without having to reload the CD or the download file, should repair be necessary. If you keep the CD or the download file, you may safely delete the "Installation Files" folder.

After deleting this folder, it is a good idea to remove the installer-defined shortcut to PSP on your Desktop and replace it with one you create. Right-click on the shortcut and choose Delete from the context menu. Then browse to the Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI folder, find the file called Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo.exe, right-click on that file and choose Create Shortcut from the context menu. Then just move this shortcut to your Desktop.


dot 174 Starting Animation Shop From Within PSP XI
Animation Shop does not ship with PSP XI. However, if you have a previous version of PSP which included Animation Shop, you can use that version of Animation Shop with PSP XI. To start Animation Shop from within PSP XI, I have provided a small script based on a function written by Gary Barton. Bind this script to an icon using Customize in PSP XI, and then place that icon on a toolbar or menu so that you can start Animation Shop at the touch of a button. Click here to download the script.

In this script, which must be installed in a Scripts-Trusted folder, I have used the path to the Animation Shop executable as found on my system - if your path is different, edit the script, changing the path in line 42.

If you need help binding the script to an icon, visit my Using Bound Scripts in PSP 9 tutorial. Though this tutorial was written for PSP 9, binding scripts to icons works the same way in PSP XI.


dot 175 Updating Back to Animation Shop From PSP XI
In PSP XI, the ability to export frames from Animation Shop back to PSP is lost. In order to work on frames opened in Animation Shop, they must each be copied and pasted into PSP XI. Because of this change, the "Update Back to Animation Shop" command which can be found in the Unused Commands category in Customize, no longer works. Communication between Animation Shop and PSP is now totally lost.


dot 176 Using System Colors In PSP - Getting Rid of the Gray Background Color
For those who might be frustrated with the dark gray background of the PSP workspace, you can set it to whatever your application background color is using the Customize dialog:
  1. Choose View...Customize.
  2. Click on the Options tab.
  3. Check 'Use System Colors' (red arrow below).
  4. Click the Close button to exit Customize and save your settings.

    customize dialog - use system colors

If that doesn't change the background color of the PSP workspace, you need to check the settings in Windows:

  1. On your Windows desktop, right click and choose Properties from the context menu.
  2. Click the Appearances tab.
  3. Click the Advanced button.
  4. Choose Application Background in the Item drop-list (green arrow below).
  5. In the Color 1 color box, choose a color other than gray (red arrow below).
  6. Click OK to save your changes.
  7. Click OK again to apply your changes and exit the Properties dialog.

    windows appearance tab advanced settings

When you return to PSP, the color you chose in the Color 1 box will be the background color in your workspace.


dot 177 Adding More Control to Clarify
If you want a little more control in the Clarify effect than you can get with the Strength settings, try duplicating the layer you want to clarify, apply the effect to the duplicate layer, and then adjust the opacity of the duplicate layer to moderate the strength of the effect.

Another technique that has been suggested is to split the image to RGB (Image...Split Channel...Split to RGB), apply Clarify to each channel, and then recombine the channels (Image...Combine Channel...Combine from RGB).


dot 178 Resetting the Registry Values for PSP XI
Here's a nice little trick for resetting the registry with PSP XI:
  1. On your Desktop, click the PSP XI icon once to select it.
  2. Hold down the SHIFT key and double click the PSP XI icon again.
  3. You should get a message asking if you'd like to set the application back to its default state. Click Yes and the registry settings will be removed - be aware that you will lose any customizations or preferences that you have set, but no files will be deleted. When you start PSP, it will be as if for the first time.


dot 179 Creating Bullets When Using the Text Tool
There are a couple of ways to add bullets to text in PSP:
  1. The first way is very simple, and will work with many fonts:
    • Choose the Text tool.
    • Click on the image where you want to place the text - this will activate the Text Entry box.
    • Type the text you want bulleted.
    • Move the cursor in the Text Entry box to the location where you want to place the bullet, hold down the ALT key and type 0149 using the Numeric Keypad on your keyboard. Sometimes a smaller or square bullet can be created by typing 0183 instead.
  2. The second method uses the Windows Character Map program:
    • Choose the Text tool.
    • Click on the image where you want to place the text - this will activate the Text Entry box.
    • Type the text you want bulleted.
    • Return to Windows and choose Start, click on Run, and type CharMap in the Run Open box - this will bring up the Character Map dialog.
    • Choose any installed font from the Font drop-list at the top of the dialog.
    • When you find a bullet you like, click the Select button, and then the Copy button.
    • Return to PSP, place the cursor in the Text Entry box where you want the bullet, and press CTRL + V to paste the bullet. You might need to backspace to return the text to the same line as the bullet.


dot 180 How To Reset Cache
PSP builds cache files on your computer to improve program performance. Sometimes, these PSP cache files become corrupted. You might have installed Picture Tubes that are not showing, or Preset Shapes. Or you're seeing duplicates of your Picture Tubes. When this happens, the best thing to do is to reset cache, deleting all the cache files so PSP can rebuild them. To do this:
  1. Choose File...Preferences...Reset Preferences.
  2. In the Reset the Application dialog, CHECK the "Delete all cache files" checkbox.
  3. Click the OK button.
  4. Exit PSP. The cache files will be deleted.
  5. Restart PSP. The cache files will be rebuilt as needed.


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