Info Pane: Pixels

The Pixels tab appears in the Info pane when a tile in an image is picked with an Alt-click.   It provides limited editing capabilities with raster images.

 

 

See the Info Pane and Images  topic for examples.

 

See Also

Info Pane

 

Info Pane: Component

 

Info Pane: Values

 

Info Pane: Coordinates

 

Info Pane: Style

 

Info Pane: Related

 

Info Pane: Position

 

Info Pane and Images

 

Getting Started

 

User Interface Basics

 

Project Pane

 

Layers Pane

 

Style Pane

 

Transform Pane

 

Traverses

 

Maps

 

Drawings

 

Images

 

Labels

 

Selection

 

Style

 

Assign Initial Coordinate System

 

Repair Initial Coordinate System

 

Reproject Component

 

Traverses

 

Example: Edit Coordinates While Creating an Object - When creating an object in a map using a tool such as Create Area, right in the middle of the process we can edit coordinates in the Info pane Coordinates tab.   This example shows the step by step process.

 

Example: Edit Attributes and Move a Point - We look at the attributes for a point in a drawing layer and edit one of the attributes using a more expanded Edit dialog.  We then move the point to a new location. Easy!

 

Example: Edit Attributes, Larger Text, IME for Asian Languages - A tour showing how to edit attributes in a drawing using the Info pane Values tab and the expanded Edit dialog, including advanced Unicode facilities and use of the built in Input Method Editor (IME) to input text in Japanese language.

 

Example: Assign Initial Coordinate System - Use the Info pane to manually assign an initial coordinate system when importing from a format that does not specify the coordinate system.

 

Example: Change Projection of an Image - Use the Reproject Component command to change the projection of an image, raster data showing terrain elevations in a region of Florida, from Latitude / Longitude to Orthographic centered on Florida.

 

Example: Create Parcels from Traverse Files - Traverse files using ESRI traverse file format are widely used by surveyors and government organizations in the US to define parcels and lines by describing a sequence of directions, distances and curves from a starting point.  Manifold automatically handles both tangent and non-tangent curves in ESRI traverse file format as well as the full variety of options used to specify angles, distances and curves.  This video shows how it's easy to create a parcel from a traverse file.