How does one tell a paint program : I give you this image to edit, then you give it back to me with exactly the same limits, and don't ask me where they are, the limits are those of the object I gave you to work with ?
Sorry this is so basic and clumsy a question I cant even find the words, but I've been struggling for years to do that and I STILL haven't found the solution.
It can be in Microsoft Paint, it can be in Paint.net, any desperately simple program to do the following :
- Take a snapshot out of the screen with MS Snipping Tool or somesuch. Or a plain photograph.
- Put it into a paint program.
- Do someting to the image. Something very simple. Usually draw a red rectangle onto it to show something. Or underline some words.
- And that's all. After that I want to "take out the image from the program" and put it elsewhere. Paste it into Word, anything.
- But I want the image and only the image. Not the stupid white thing behind it. They call it the canvas I think. I want the program to understand by itself it has to bring out of itself what I brought into it. Not less, not more. I dont want to draw a rectangle around it to show to the program where the photograph is. It knows that. It's obvious. I have already selected the zone when doing the snap, I don't want to do it again and struggle with the limits and risk putting in the image too little or too much. How does one do that ? There must be a way.
Sorry this is so basic and clumsy a question I cant even find the words, but I've been struggling for years to do that and I STILL haven't found the solution.
It can be in Microsoft Paint, it can be in Paint.net, any desperately simple program to do the following :
- Take a snapshot out of the screen with MS Snipping Tool or somesuch. Or a plain photograph.
- Put it into a paint program.
- Do someting to the image. Something very simple. Usually draw a red rectangle onto it to show something. Or underline some words.
- And that's all. After that I want to "take out the image from the program" and put it elsewhere. Paste it into Word, anything.
- But I want the image and only the image. Not the stupid white thing behind it. They call it the canvas I think. I want the program to understand by itself it has to bring out of itself what I brought into it. Not less, not more. I dont want to draw a rectangle around it to show to the program where the photograph is. It knows that. It's obvious. I have already selected the zone when doing the snap, I don't want to do it again and struggle with the limits and risk putting in the image too little or too much. How does one do that ? There must be a way.
My Computer
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Custom build
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM)
- CPU
- AMD Athlon II X4 640 (3 GHz, 4 cores)
- Motherboard
- Asus M4A 89 GTD Pro/USB3
- Memory
- Patriot 16Gb DDR3 1600 (2 kits of 2)
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI Radeon HD 4290 (integrated)
- Sound Card
- AMD + Realtek HD Audio (integrated)
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Hewlett-Packard ZR2440w (24")
- Screen Resolution
- 1920 x 1200
- Hard Drives
- Internal : Samsung SSD 860 EVO 250 Gb (system), Seagate Barrcuda 1 Tb (data), Western Digital Caviar Blue 500 Gb (archives).
External (USB) : 2 x 1 Tb 2,5" Seagate Barracuda (backups).
- PSU
- Corsair VX 450 W
- Case
- Antec Solo
- Cooling
- Cooler Master Hyper 212 Plus, 2 Nexus Real Silent Case fans
- Keyboard
- Cherry KC 1000
- Mouse
- Logitech M 90
- Internet Speed
- Fiber, 300 Mbit/s down, 200 Mbit/s up
- Antivirus
- Microsoft Security Essentials
- Browser
- Vivaldi, Tor
- Other Info
- BIOS Date: 07/18/11 Ver: 08.00.15.
Modem-router : provided by ISP
