Adobe 23101335 User Guide - Page 79

Reverting to any state of an image, About the History palette

Page 79 highlights

ADOBE PHOTOSHOP 6.0 69 User Guide • Select the area you want to restore, and choose Edit > Fill. For Use, choose History, and click OK. For more information, see "Filling and stroking selections and layers" in online Help. Note: To restore the image with a snapshot of the initial state of the document, choose History Options from the Palette menu and make sure that the Automatically Create First Snapshot option is on. Reverting to any state of an image The History palette lets you jump to any recent state of the image created during the current working session. Each time you apply a change to an image, the new state of that image is added to the palette. For example, if you select, paint, and rotate part of an image, each of those states is listed separately in the palette. You can then select any of the states, and the image will revert to how it looked when that change was first applied. You can then work from that state. About the History palette Note the following guidelines when using the History palette: • Program-wide changes, such as changes to palettes, color settings, actions, and preferences, are not changes to a particular image and so are not added to the History palette. • By default, the History palette lists the previous 20 states. Older states are automatically deleted to free more memory for Photoshop. To keep a particular state throughout your work session, make a snapshot of the state. (See "Making a snapshot of an image (Photoshop)" on page 72.) • Once you close and reopen the document, all states and snapshots from the last working session are cleared from the palette. • By default, a snapshot of the initial state of the document is displayed at the top of the palette. • States are added from the top down. That is, the oldest state is at the top of the list, the most recent one at the bottom. • Each state is listed with the name of the tool or command used to change the image. • By default, selecting a state dims those below. This way you can easily see which changes will be discarded if you continue working from the selected state. For information on customizing the history options, see "Setting history options (Photoshop)" on page 71. • By default, selecting a state and then changing the image eliminates all states that come after. • If you select a state and then change the image, eliminating the states that came after, you can use the Undo command to undo the last change and restore the eliminated states. • By default, deleting a state deletes that state and those that came after it. If you choose the Allow Non-Linear History option, deleting a state deletes just that state. (See "Setting history options (Photoshop)" on page 71.)

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69
ADOBE PHOTOSHOP 6.0
User Guide
Select the area you want to restore, and choose
Edit > Fill. For Use, choose History, and click OK.
For more information, see “Filling and
stroking selections and layers” in
online Help.
Note:
To restore the image with a snapshot of the
initial state of the document, choose History Options
from the Palette menu and make sure that the
Automatically Create First Snapshot option is on.
Reverting to any state of an
image
The History palette lets you jump to any recent
state of the image created during the current
working session. Each time you apply a change to
an image, the new state of that image is added to
the palette.
For example, if you select, paint, and rotate part of
an image, each of those states is listed separately in
the palette. You can then select any of the states,
and the image will revert to how it looked when
that change was first applied. You can then work
from that state.
About the History palette
Note the following guidelines when using the
History palette:
Program-wide changes, such as changes to
palettes, color settings, actions, and preferences,
are not changes to a particular image and so are
not added to the History palette.
By default, the History palette lists the previous
20 states. Older states are automatically deleted to
free more memory for Photoshop. To keep a
particular state throughout your work session,
make a snapshot of the state. (See “Making a
snapshot of an image (Photoshop)” on page 72.)
Once you close and reopen the document,
all states and snapshots from the last working
session are cleared from the palette.
By default, a snapshot of the initial state of the
document is displayed at the top of the palette.
States are added from the top down. That is, the
oldest state is at the top of the list, the most recent
one at the bottom.
Each state is listed with the name of the tool or
command used to change the image.
By default, selecting a state dims those below.
This way you can easily see which changes will be
discarded if you continue working from the
selected state. For information on customizing the
history options, see “Setting history options
(Photoshop)” on page 71.
By default, selecting a state and then changing
the image eliminates all states that come after.
If you select a state and then change the image,
eliminating the states that came after, you can use
the Undo command to undo the last change and
restore the eliminated states.
By default, deleting a state deletes that state and
those that came after it. If you choose the Allow
Non-Linear History option, deleting a state deletes
just that state. (See “Setting history options
(Photoshop)” on page 71.)