• @aliteral
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    1416 months ago

    These people who hate GIMP didn’t really practice with it all that much. I use for my day job, editing photos and making content for marketplaces. It works very well. The workflow may be different to PS, yes, but that does not make GIMP bad. Also, for those who hate the UI, two things. First, why don’t you help the dev team? And second, we’ll have GTK3 support soon (finally).

    • at_an_angle
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      756 months ago

      I tried. I really tried to like GIMP. The main reason I don’t like it is because it’s trying so hard to be a professional picture editor and the UI.

      Why can’t I deselect things? Why does something need to be selected at all times? Let me just click a button and remove the selection outline and deselect things.

      No. I won’t help the dev team because I can’t code to save my ass. I turn wrenchs and fix things for a living.

      I use other, simpler pic editors. Why should I learn to fly a Boeing 747 when a Cessna 172 will get me where I need to go? I’m making a shit post once every three months, not professional art.

      • qaz
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        276 months ago

        You can deselect all with CTRL + SHIFT + A and deselect a specific part by changing the selection mode from replace or additive to subtract.

          • @umbraroze
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            76 months ago

            When I was learning about GIMP key shortcuts I was like “Ctrl+A selects everything, Ctrl+Shift+A deselects everything. Makes sense.”

            And then I went to most of the other apps. “Ctrl+D? Well it’s one less keypress, but… WHY?”

            To be fair, I get it now, I’ve used plenty of image editors and I remember the keybinds wherever I am. Just that I sometimes find it annoying that The Other Software hasn’t adopted logical keybindings.

            (I find it particularly annoying that a lot of image editors try to be fancy and sophisticated and Photoshop-compatible and think it’s at all appropriate to use Ctrl+NumpadPlus and Ctrl+NumpadMinus for zooming. Just use what GIMP uses! NumpadPlus and NumpadMinus. It’s not hard! What are you using the plain plus and minus for, anyway? Absolutely nothing! I just checked, I need to use Ctrl in Affinity Photo. Plain plus and minus are useless. I see you. …oh I can just rebind these. Done.)

            • GTG3000
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              26 months ago

              I just change certain keybinds to be GIMP-like whenever I switch drawing programs.

              N is the pencil, CTRL-SHIFT-A is deselect. There’s something else, but I can’t remember right now.

        • @irreticent
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          66 months ago

          Do you know of any good video tutorials? There are so many I don’t know where to start. I tried one and it seemed too fast paced and not that helpful.

    • @PoliticalAgitator
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      346 months ago

      GIMP is bad. If the problem was simply that it was “different to PS” then other apps like Krita and Affinity Photo would have the same reputation.

      If a user goes looking for a tool or feature and it’s not in the first place they look, that’s a problem of “didn’t really practice that much”. If experienced people need to look up how to do basic operations and their reaction is “that’s fucking stupid”, then the software is bad.

      To then say “well why don’t you help the Dev team then” is insane. I’m not spending hundreds of hours digging GIMP out of bad design decisions when I could just use better software and I haven’t seen any evidence that my PR would even be accepted.

      Nobody needs excuses and apologism, they need Blender for image editing and GIMP just isn’t that.

      • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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        396 months ago

        I mean, I’ve been using GIMP as my primary photo editor for…over a decade. When I use other programs, nothing is where I expect it to be and I think “well, that’s fucking stupid”

        • @PoliticalAgitator
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          226 months ago

          Have you thought about applying for a job at Adobe and fixing it?

          • @redthings
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            -56 months ago

            Getting a job at Adobe is not helping GIMP

            • @PoliticalAgitator
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              186 months ago

              No, but “fix it yourself” is apparently a completely acceptable response if someone criticizes GIMP.

              Anyway, I don’t care how bad the tools you use are, but it’s time to stop acting shocked when industry professionals have no interest in GIMP and don’t take anyone who advocates it as a Photoshop alternative seriously.

              • @[email protected]
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                26 months ago

                Nobody is acting shocked. Least the people who learned to use GIMP.

                The problem is people like you who are outraged, when asking for a free Photoshop alternative, that the next best thing is not to their likening.

                And yes “consider fixing it yourself” is absolutely a valid response for GIMP issues because GIMP is made by volunteers For Photoshop it a bullshit response because it’s made by a billion dollar company which charges you for the development and use.

                • @PoliticalAgitator
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                  16 months ago

                  Nobody is acting shocked. Least the people who learned to use GIMP.

                  So the people who learn GIMP are fully aware why it gets zero industry use? Thanks, that was my point.

                  The problem is people like you who are outraged, when asking for a free Photoshop alternative, that the next best thing is not to their likening.

                  I’m not outraged in the slightest, nor am I asking for a free Photoshop alternative. But I’ve seen people claiming GIMP is a viable alternative to Photoshop for 20 years and for anything past the most basic use cases, it isn’t. You may as well be telling people to use Nano instead of Visual Studio and when they complain about the experience, tell them to code the features themselves.

                  GIMP has had literally decades of development and even with Photoshop in the worst state it’s ever been in, it isn’t competitive. There are clearly systemic issues with the project and I’m certain this “head in the sand” mentality is at least partly to blame.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    26 months ago

                    It is the next best completely free alternative. Whether people like it or not.

                    GIMP has had literally decades of development and even with Photoshop in the worst state it’s ever been in, it isn’t competitive.

                    How is that an argument? How do you get the idea that GIMP is basically required to be competitive, just because it’s old? Completely disregarding the fact it’s made by volunteers vs a billion dollar company. And also completely disregarding the fact that Photoshop is even older than GIMP. By your own logic, just going by age, how can they be competitive when they are half a decade younger than PS?

                    Rewriting the whole thing would sure help. But not with the “I’m not going to help, fuck off” community.

        • @[email protected]
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          206 months ago

          So you open any other image editor, click the rectangle select button, draw a rectangle, then select a move button beside the rectangle select tool, then it moves the rectangle you just selected and you think “That’s fucking stupid, it should’ve moved the entire image, not the rectangle I just selected!”

          Really?

          • @Norodix
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            26 months ago

            Yes, really. If my move tool is set to layer move, dont change it just because I used the select tool for something completely unrelated. That is the typical dumbed down big colorful button approach that I hate in modern corporate software.

            • Liz
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              76 months ago

              I feel like my tools should work together instead of having their parameters set individually. If I select something, it’s because I want to do stuff with it. Imagine hitting play on a video and then also having to hit play on the audio.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Look, that you’re used to the garbage UI doesn’t change that it’s garbage and in dire need of a fundamental revamp. If almost everyone here (and everywhere else) says that it sucks or is intransparent, then YOU may be the odd one out here ;)

              Imagine hating usable software you don’t need a PhD for. It’s kinda pathetic to make this your point of pride.

        • @umbraroze
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          116 months ago

          I’ve been using GIMP since the very dawn, I use plenty of other image editors for variety of reasons (Affinity Photo, DxO PhotoLab, ArtRage, Clip Studio), and I have no problems with the UIs in any of them.

          Yet every time I use Adobe software I’m like “why is it doing this? Why is it designed this way? Who thought that was a good idea? This is stupid.”

    • @jose1324
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      6 months ago

      ‘help the dev team’ is a lunatics response. I use Linux but fuck the users man.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        It’s a bit lunatic, but it’s arguably the only way forward. GIMP doesn’t have a multi billion dollar company behind - only volunteers.

        Expecting the developers to have the capacity and skill to emulate the features and looks of Photoshop (and quickly, please) - in their free time - is even more lunatic.

        • @jose1324
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          6 months ago

          I’m not expecting anything. But if your response to genuine criticism is “fix it urself in the code lol” then fuck off

    • @[email protected]
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      176 months ago

      I’m just glad they added non destructive editing in the latest version. I’ve tried to rotate/resize something in gimp before and it was a chore to keep quality acceptable.

      • @aliteral
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        56 months ago

        That is great indeed. And it’s nearing 3.0!

    • @dejected_warp_core
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      6 months ago

      I think what burns people the most is that after Photoshop 5 or so, GIMP stopped keeping up with all the improvements in the later Photoshop versions. People making the jump from 2024 Photoshop to 1996 Photoshop UI/UX are gonna have a bad time.

      Edit: as a software developer I can say that I’ve never seen a user more frustrated, sometimes even irrationally so, when they are forced to re-learn muscle memory to perform a familiar task. I’ve also seen people practically riot at the mere suggestion that this will happen. If you wish to curry favor with your userbase, never ever, remove keyboard accelerators, move toolbars around, break workflow, etc.

    • @BlessedDog
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      146 months ago

      Had to learn Gimp in 4th or 6th grade, not sire which one it was, pretty comfortable with it, though I admit, it can be frustrating sometimes.

    • The How™
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      136 months ago

      I know it’s a consequence of open source development, but I just absolutely despise the file picker. Everything else is dreamy.

      • @renzev
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        6 months ago

        Everything else is dreamy.

        Gimp spolied me. Now every time I’m forced to use a GUI app with lots of dropdown menu items, I get irrationally angry that I can’t just hit / to search through them like I can in gimp lol.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          Blender changed it to just start typing one or two minor versions ago. There’s certainly stuff I have no idea how to find in the menus because F3 is way more convenient than remembering things (just be aware that you still need to be in the right mode for stuff to show up).

      • @aliteral
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        56 months ago

        Why? Genuinely curious about what is wrong with it.

        • @renzev
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          46 months ago

          Maybe they dislike the filepicker because it doesn’t support icon view, only list view (just like the standard gtk filepicker)? I remember a while back lots of people were getting their panties in a twist over it, it was a huge meme in the gnome hater community.

          • @AProfessional
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            46 months ago

            GIMP could fix that today if they just used the filepicker portal. Otherwise once they get to GTK4.

            • @renzev
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              16 months ago

              Honestly filepickers are kinda cringe, no matter what display mode it uses. I just have a shortcut that basically does find ~ | dmenu | xargs dragon-drop (well, the script itself is a little more complicated, but that’s the gist of it) so I can just search for files and drop them into the filepicker directly. Hopefully once everything switches to xdg-portal, someone can make a “filepicker” implementation that just does something like that directly.

    • @[email protected]
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      136 months ago

      Please teach to how draw good circles and eclipse And how to resize sollection by corner

      • @renzev
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        6 months ago

        good circles and eclipse

        I assume “eclipse” is a typo of ellipse? Anyway, just use the ellipse select tool (keybind: e) to make a selection in the shape that you want, then fill it in with the bucket tool (b). Hold shift while using the bucket tool to fill in the entire selection, ignoring anything that’s drawn inside it. If you want to draw a ring rather than a completely filled circle, use the “border” command from the “select” dropdown menu to replace the ellipse/circle selection with its border.

        how to resize selection by corner

        I’m curious, what is your usecase for this? I’ve never had to do it myself. But if I had to, here’s how I would do it: first, convert the seleciton to a path. Make sure the path is visible from the “Paths” dialog (you have to explicitly show the paths dialog using the “window > dockable dialogs” option. From then on, you can use any of the usual transform tools (perspective, resize, roate, etc) on the path. You just have to select the path icon under "Transform: " in the “tool properties” dialog to make sure you’re transforming the path, not a pixel layer. Once you’ve transformed the path to your liking, you can turn it back to a selection, fill it with color, or stroke it with a brush by right-clicking on it in the “layers” dialog.

        Also, bonus tip: never use the dropdown menus, it’s a huge waste of time. Just press / to pull up for the command palette and search for the tool you need.

        EDIT: I love lovingly ranting about gimp, I can do it four hours on end. I’m not some sort of gimp guru, but I know a thing or two. If anyone has any more questions, feel free to reply to this comment and I’ll do my best to give advice.

          • @renzev
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            6 months ago

            Combination of both I guess? Like for the second one I found out that you can convert between selections and paths a long time ago just by stumbling upon the menu entry for it, but I had to look up how to apply transformations to paths

        • @[email protected]
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          26 months ago

          Not op, but if I’m trying to rectangle select something, I sometimes get it close on the first try but not exactly right, so instead of trying to redraw the selection or use additive/subtractive selections, it is more intuitive to me to try and resize the selection box.

          I had to use PS for school recently and it’s nice that it supports this use case, although I did have to search for a guide to learn how to do it.

    • @FangedWyvern42
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      26 months ago

      help the dev team

      And we wonder why people don’t like using Linux or FOSS software.

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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        46 months ago

        That’s their prerogative. FLOSS is a communal effort of equals. Users are not customers; not entitled to anything as it’s donated freely. If you want to be bannied and not contribute, there’s proprietary software out there but they’ll exact a price (currently more than just financial).