Since fill and stroke are not a tool, they do no appear on the Toolbox, as is the case in Adobe Illustrator. Many tools (such as Node tool, Tweak tool, shape tools) simply ignore grouping and allow you to click-select any object regardless of whether it is grouped or not. Or you can right-click the group and do "Enter group" after which objects in the group can be selected as if they are not grouped. To select an individual object in a group of objects, hold the Ctrl key and click on the object with the Selector. In Inkscape there is no special group select tool. You can also use touch selection in Selector tool: draw over objects with Alt and, when you release, objects which you touched will be selected. Unlike Illustrator, nodes from multiple uncombined objects cannot be selected at the same time (as of 0.46). Individual nodes of paths can be selected with the Node tool rubberband, the same as in Illustrator however the object must be selected first, and only the nodes from one object (which may combine several subpaths) can be selected. In order to select objects with the rubberband in Inkscape, an artist must completely select the entire area of the object, not just select over part of it, to include it in the selection. Instead of holding down the Ctrl key and pressing + or - to zoom the canvas, in Inkscape the artist simply presses the + or - key to zoom. In 0.46, it is possible to set up Space to work as in Illustrator: even though there's no Hand tool, holding Space and dragging canvas will work if you turn on this mode in Inkscape Preferences (Scrolling tab). Holding the arrow key speeds up the pan in that direction. In Inkscape, the artist can also pan around the canvas by holding the Ctrl and pressing the arrow keys. Alternatively, rotate mouse wheel to pan vertically, rotate with shift to pan horizontally. Instead of using the Spacebar for panning around a document, in Inkscape an artist can press and hold the middle mouse button (or mouse wheel) and drag the canvas in any direction. Getting Things Done In Inkscape Hand Tool : Navigating the Canvas Keys to move/rotate/scale by screen pixels.Clones, tiled clones, edit clones on canvas.Things Inkscape can do that Illustrator can not: Free transform and perspective transform (only via extension).Natively work with graphs based on data.Color management for print (ICC Profiles, etc.).Multiple strokes and fills for one object. Gradient mesh (planned for future release).Things Illustrator can do that Inkscape can not do: Tools: see AdobeToolMap for complete tool equivalency reference.Marquee: this is called "the rubberband" when selecting.Palettes: in Inkscape, "palettes" are called "dialogs", such as the Fill and Stroke dialog.Anchor Points: in Inkscape, anchor points are known as "Nodes".4.11.1 Working with nodes in Inkscape has several distinct advantages over Illustrator:.4.11 Working with Nodes (Anchor Points) and Paths.4.8 Proportional Scaling and Center Point : Shift and Control Keys.4.5 Fill & Stroke : Fill and Stroke Window.4.3 Selecting : Selector and Nodes Tool.3 Things Inkscape can do that Illustrator can not:.2 Things Illustrator can do that Inkscape can not do:.
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