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Photoshop CS3
Adobe Photoshop CS3 Scripting Guide Scripting Photoshop CS3 41
(psParagraphText/TextType.PARAGRAPHTEXT
. ) When a new text-object is created, its kind
property is automatically set to
point text.
The
text-object properties height, width, and leading are valid only when the text item's kind
property is set to
paragraph text.
To familiarize yourself with this objects, properties, and commands in the scripting references, do the
following:
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 AppleScript Scripting Reference or in the Photoshop CS3 AppleScript
Dictionary, look up the
text-object properties and methods.
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 Visual Basic Scripting Reference, or in the Visual Basic Object Browser
look up the
TextItem property of the ArtLayer object. To find the properties and methods you can
use with a text layer, look up the
TextItem object.
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 JavaScript Scripting Reference, or in the ExtendScript Object Model
Viewer, look up the
textItem property of the ArtLayer object. To find the properties and methods
you can use with a text layer, look up the
TextItem object.
Working with Selection Objects
You use a Selection object to allow your scripts to act only on a specific, selected section of your
document or a layer within a document. For example, you can apply effects to a selection or copy the
current selection to the clipboard.
The
Selection object is a property of the Document object. Look up the following for more information:
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 AppleScript Scripting Reference or in the Photoshop CS3 AppleScript
Dictionary, look up the command
select. Also, look up the selection property of the Document
object, and the
selection-object.
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 Visual Basic Scripting Reference, or in the Visual Basic Object Browser, look
up
Selection as a property of the Document object. Also, look up the Select as a method of the
Selection object.
In the Adobe Photoshop CS3 JavaScript Scripting Reference, or in the ExtendScript Object Model Viewer,
look up
selection as a property of the Document object. Also, look up the select as a method of the
Selection object.
Note: You cannot create a new
Selection object. The property selection (Selection/selection) on
the
Document object contains a pre-existing selection object for the document. Use the select
(Select/select) command to specify the area for the selection.
Creating and Defining a Selection
To create a selection, you use the select/Select/select() command of the Selection object.
You define a selection by specifying the coordinates on the screen that describe the selection’s corners.
Since your document is a 2-dimensional object, you specify coordinates using the x-and y-axes as follows:
You use the x-axis to specify the horizontal position on the canvas.
You use the y-axis to specify the vertical position on the canvas.
The origin point in Photoshop CS3, that is, x-axis = 0 and y-axis = 0, is the upper left corner of the screen.
The opposite corner, the lower right, is the extreme point of the canvas. For example, if your canvas is 1000
x 1000 pixels, then the coordinate for the lower right corner is x-axis = 1000 and y-axis = 1000.
You specify coordinate points that describe the shape you want to select as an array, which then becomes
the argument or parameter value for the
select/Select/select() command.