Adobe 13102498 User Guide - Page 599

DICOM files (Photoshop Extended)

Page 599 highlights

PHOTOSHOP CS3 592 User Guide New document attributes and defaults Entering psnewdoc(W,H,R,N,M,F,A,B,P) creates a new document with values for the following attributes: W Specifies the width of the document using the current units from the Units & Rulers option in the Photoshop Preferences dialog box. The default width is 504 pixels. H Specifies the height of the document using the current units in the Units & Rulers panel in the Photoshop Preference dialog box. The default height is 360. R Specifies the resolution. The default is 72 ppi. N Specifies the document name. The default is Untitled-X, where X is the index for new documents. M Specifies the color mode: RGB, CMYK, Lab, Bitmap, or Grayscale. The default is RGB. F Specifies the background contents of the new document: White, Background Color, or Transparent. The default is White. A Specifies the pixel aspect ratio. The default is 1.0 (square). B Specifies the bit depth: 1, 8, 16, or 32. The default is 8. P Specifies the color profile. The default is the working color space for the specified color mode. The working spaces are specified in the Photoshop Color Settings dialog box. DICOM files (Photoshop Extended) About DICOM files (Photoshop Extended) DICOM is the most common standard for receiving medical scans. Photoshop Extended allows you to open and work with DICOM (.dc3, .dcm, .dic, or no extension) files. DICOM files can contain multiple "slices" or frames, which represent different layers of a scan. Photoshop reads all frames from a DICOM file and converts them to Photoshop layers. Photoshop can read 8-, 10-, 12-, or 16-bit DICOM files. (Photoshop converts 10- and 12-bit files to 16-bit files.) Once you've opened a DICOM file in Photoshop, you can use any Photoshop tool to adjust, mark up, or annotate the file. For example, use the Notes tool to add a comment to the file, the Pencil tool to mark a specific area of the scan or the Dust And Scratches filter to remove dust or scratches from a scan. You can save 8-bit DICOM files in any file format Photoshop supports (16-bit files must be saved as DICOM, Large Document Format, Photoshop, Photoshop PDF, Photoshop Raw, PNG, or TIFF files). Important: When you save a file as DICOM, any layer styles, adjustments, blend modes, or masks are discarded. You can also view and edit metadata for DICOM files in Bridge or in the Photoshop File Info dialog box. DICOM files support external automation through scripting (see "About scripting" on page 622). For a video about DICOM files, see www.adobe.com/go/vid0028. See also "Annotating images" on page 467 "Paint with the Brush tool or Pencil tool" on page 326 "Apply the Dust And Scratches filter" on page 397

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PHOTOSHOP CS3
User Guide
592
N
ew document attributes and defaults
Entering
psnewdoc(W,H,R,N,M,F,A,B,P)
creates a new document with values for the following attributes:
W
Specifies the width of the document using the current units from the Units & Rulers option in the Photoshop
Preferences dialog box. The default width is 504 pixels.
H
Specifies the height of the document using the current units in the Units & Rulers panel in the Photoshop
Preference dialog box. The default height is 360.
R
Specifies the resolution. The default is 72 ppi.
N
Specifies the document name. The default is Untitled-X, where X is the index for new documents.
M
Specifies the color mode: RGB, CMYK, Lab, Bitmap, or Grayscale. The default is RGB.
F
Specifies the background contents of the new document: White, Background Color, or Transparent. The default
is White.
A
Specifies the pixel aspect ratio. The default is 1.0 (square).
B
Specifies the bit depth: 1, 8, 16, or 32. The default is 8.
P
Specifies the color profile. The default is the working color space for the specified color mode. The working spaces
are specified in the Photoshop Color Settings dialog box.
DICOM files (Photoshop Extended)
About DICOM files (Photoshop Extended)
DICOM is the most common standard for receiving medical scans. Photoshop Extended allows you to open and
work with DICOM (.dc3, .dcm, .dic, or no extension) files. DICOM files can contain multiple “slices” or frames,
which represent different layers of a scan.
Photoshop reads all frames from a DICOM file and converts them to Photoshop layers. Photoshop can read 8-, 10-,
12-, or 16-bit DICOM files. (Photoshop converts 10- and 12-bit files to 16-bit files.)
Once you’ve opened a DICOM file in Photoshop, you can use any Photoshop tool to adjust, mark up, or annotate the
file. For example, use the Notes tool to add a comment to the file, the Pencil tool to mark a specific area of the scan
or the Dust And Scratches filter to remove dust or scratches from a scan.
You can save 8-bit DICOM files in any file format Photoshop supports (16-bit files must be saved as DICOM, Large
Document Format, Photoshop, Photoshop PDF, Photoshop Raw, PNG, or TIFF files).
Important:
When you save a file as DICOM, any layer styles, adjustments, blend modes, or masks are discarded.
You can also view and edit metadata for DICOM files in Bridge or in the Photoshop File Info dialog box. DICOM
files support external automation through scripting (see “About scripting” on page 622).
For a video about DICOM files, see
www.adobe.com/go/vid0028
.
See also
“Annotating images” on page 467
“Paint with the Brush tool or Pencil tool” on page 326
“Apply the Dust And Scratches filter” on page 397