For now though, a great reminder is to use the Grow and Shrink keyboard controls for the brush size (Command + plus or minus key). Thank you so much for this thoughtful review, J3nny99! I'll definitely consider the workflow you described when developing new features for the future versions. I love this app, I just thought of some things that may help work flow! If I had a small pen, I couldn't just swtich to the eraser and erase a quick mistake (as the eraser would be too small to work with functionally) so I had to stop my drawing and toggle back to changing the settings. I'm not sure if this is possible though! Also, if there's any way to enable the eraser to be a bigger brush size than the pen size. I love the flow/feeling of the touch pad but I tend to lose my spot if I dont have a tracker for reference of where I am on the page. I love the app! I was thinking of a feature that's a mix between the click option and touch that may be useful. I'll make sure to include something regarding this when I implement a Help menu! - joao I guess it makes sense, but it's unfortunate. Even Apple's own implementations of this feature lack the ability. I fully understand that might be a limitation of the OS, but if there is any way for the app to still be able to work with that feature turned off in the system preferences, then that would make this app just perfect.Īnd this review brought a smile to mine! Thank you so much! I believe getting pressure data with that setting turned off is not possible, unfortunately.
The only thing that caught me out is that I have always had the "Force Click and haptic feedback" feature turned off in the Trackpad system preferences on my Mac because I hate the way it makes the Trackpad operate in the Finder and so my pressure sensitivity was turned off at first.
I also missed the initial instruction on how to dismiss the drawing mode with ⌘d but just had fun playing and exploring for a while.
For the full journey from Jaguar (macOS circa 2001) to Catalina EazyDraw has been the.
MacDraw was the vector cousin of MacPaint.
It was eventually adapted by Claris and, in the early 1990s, MacDraw Pro was released with color support. MacDraw was useful for drawing technical diagrams and floorplans. With this productivity tool you can create beautiful, structured diagrams.