Adobe photoshop cs2 사용자 설명서

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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
To receive notification when an operation is completed 
A progress bar  indicates that an operation  is  being performed. You  can interrupt  the operation  or  have  the program  
notify you when it has finished the operation. 
1
Do one of the following: 
(Windows) choose Edit > Preferences > General. 
• 
(Mac OS) choose Photoshop > Preferences > General or choose ImageReady > Preferences General. 
Do one of the following: 
(Photoshop) Select Beep When Done. 
(ImageReady) Select Notify When Done. In Mac OS, you can then choose System Alert to be notified through 
your system alert or Text To Speech to receive a spoken notification. 
3
Click OK. 
About the History palette 
You can use the History palette to jump to any recent state of the image created during the current working session. 
Each time you apply a change to an image, the new state of that image is added to the palette. 
For example, if you select, paint, and rotate part of an image, each of those states is listed separately in the palette. 
When you select one of the states, the image reverts to how it looked when that change was first applied. You can 
then work from that state. 
You can also use the History palette to delete image states and, in Photoshop, to create a document from a state or 
snapshot. 
To display the History palette, choose Window > History, or click the History palette tab. 
Photoshop History palette 
A. Sets the source for the history brush  B. Thumbnail of a snapshot  C. History state  D. History state slider 
Keep the following in mind when using the History palette: 
Program-wide changes, such as changes to palettes, color settings, actions, and preferences, are not reflected in the 
History palette, because they are not changes to a particular image. 
By default, the History palette lists the previous 20 states (Photoshop), or 32 states (ImageReady). You can change 
the number of remembered states by setting a preference. Older states are automatically deleted to free more 
memory for Photoshop. To keep a particular state throughout your work session, make a snapshot of the state. 
Once  you close  and reopen the  document, all  states  and snapshots  from  the last working  session are  cleared from  
the palette.