Computer Science, asked by rejaunnesha, 3 days ago

drawing window is not a part of the tux paint true or false​

Answers

Answered by akshatkala36
1

Answer:

true

Explanation:

Answered by kalpanakinnu
0

Answer:

number of useful drawing tools are made available. (See Drawing Tools, below.)

The drawing canvas is a fixed size, so the user doesn't need to worry about 'pixels' or 'inches' when making a new picture.

The entire program fits on a screen as small as 640x480, and can be displayed full-screen, to hide the computer's underlying 'desktop' interface. (It defaults to 800x600 mode, but can run at larger sizes and in portrait or landscape mode, as well.)

Loading and saving of images is done using thumbnails, so no knowledge of the underlying operating system's filesystem structure is needed. Even filenames are unnecessary.

Images can be exported from Tux Paint (e.g., to your "Pictures" folder).

Entertaining Interface

Fun sound effects are played when tools are selected and used.

A cartoon version of Tux, the Linux penguin, appears at the bottom to give tips, hints and information.

Drawing Tools

Paint brush

Various brushes available

Parents/teachers can add more brushes

Brushes can be animated

Brushes can change shape depending on the direction they're drawn

Brushes can point the direction that's being drawn (New in 0.9.27)

Alternate color palettes can be created and used

Color picker, for choosing colors from a drawing

Rubber stamp

Hundreds of photographic and cartoon stamps images are available

Parents/teachers can add more stamps and create categories

Stamps can have descriptive text and sound samples (names, facts, etc.) and/or sound effects assigned to them

Stamps can be resized, flipped and mirrored

Raster bitmaps (Portable Network Graphics ("PNG")) with full-color and alpha transparency (32bpp RGBA) supported

Vector graphics (Scalable Vector Graphics ("SVG")) supported

Line tool

Uses Paint Brush's brushes

'Rubberband' shows where the line will be drawn as you move the mouse

Fill

'Flood-fill' an area with a particular color

Fill an area with a solid color

Fill an area with a radial gradient

Interactively fill an area with a linear gradient

Interactively fill an area with a solid color using freehand brushstrokes (New in 0.9.27)

Shape tool

Draw various filled and unfilled polygonal shapes

Rotate shapes (this feature can be disabled for younger children)

Draw shapes from the center, or from a corner (this feature can be disabled for younger children)

Text and Label tools

Tux Paint ships with a variety of fonts

Parents/teachers can add more fonts

Bold and italic style supported; text size can be changed

Supports numerous languages (See International Character Input, below)

Labels may be moved and edited later

'Magic' (special effects) feature, with over 75 tools!

Distorts

Blocks - turn parts of the picture 'blocky'

Blur - blur parts of the picture using the mouse

Chalk - make parts of the picture look like a chalk drawing

Clone - clone parts of the picture; copy by painting

Distortion - slightly alters the position of the picture under the brush

Drip - make parts of the picture look like it's dripping away

Edges - outline the edges of shapes in your picture

Emboss - gives the image's edges highlights and shadows

Fisheye - view parts of your picture through a fish-eye lense

Glass Tile - see your drawing through glass tiles

Halftone - turn your picture into newsprint

Mosaic - make your picture into a mosaic of colors

and your answer is true

Explanation:

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