Computer Science, asked by MilanBhalala199, 4 months ago

write the process of drawing a perfect Circle in GIMP​

Answers

Answered by devika2271
0

Answer:

Hold Shift as you draw to create a perfect circle.

Click the Select menu.

Click To Path.

Click Select again and choose None.

Select a color and click Edit > Stroke Path.

Select your preferences and click Stroke.

Answered by rk9243195
0

Explanation:

Create a new layer in your image.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)On the Gimp menu, click the Select menu, then the Border menu item.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)On the Gimp menu, click the Select menu, then the Border menu item.On the Border Selection dialog that comes up, select the pixel width for your circle. (I know that’s not what it says, but that’s what it means.) I generally use two or three pixels. You can also experiment with the “Feather Border” setting to see if you like what it does.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)On the Gimp menu, click the Select menu, then the Border menu item.On the Border Selection dialog that comes up, select the pixel width for your circle. (I know that’s not what it says, but that’s what it means.) I generally use two or three pixels. You can also experiment with the “Feather Border” setting to see if you like what it does.When you click OK on that dialog, you should now see that your ellipse/circle appears to have a border, with dashed lines making up the inner and outer border edges.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)On the Gimp menu, click the Select menu, then the Border menu item.On the Border Selection dialog that comes up, select the pixel width for your circle. (I know that’s not what it says, but that’s what it means.) I generally use two or three pixels. You can also experiment with the “Feather Border” setting to see if you like what it does.When you click OK on that dialog, you should now see that your ellipse/circle appears to have a border, with dashed lines making up the inner and outer border edges.Make sure the foreground color is set to the color you want.

Create a new layer in your image.Select the Ellipse tool from the Gimp Toolbox.Draw an ellipse/circle where you want it on your image. (Click one spot, drag the mouse to a second spot, and then release it.) I recommend making it just a little bit larger than you think you’ll need it, because the circle border will have a slight width to it. (Hold down the Shift and Alt keys while drawing to make a circle rather than an ellipse.)On the Gimp menu, click the Select menu, then the Border menu item.On the Border Selection dialog that comes up, select the pixel width for your circle. (I know that’s not what it says, but that’s what it means.) I generally use two or three pixels. You can also experiment with the “Feather Border” setting to see if you like what it does.When you click OK on that dialog, you should now see that your ellipse/circle appears to have a border, with dashed lines making up the inner and outer border edges.Make sure the foreground color is set to the color you want.Finally, click the Edit menu, and select the “Fill with FG Color” option.

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