![]() Image centerĪllows you to snap to the horizontal and vertical center of an image. ![]() Image boundsĪllows you to snap to the vertical and horizontal borders of an image. This allows you to snap to the bounding box of a vector shape. This allows you to snap to an intersection of two vectors. The direction of the node depends on its side handles in path editing mode. When we draw an open path, the last nodes on either side can be mathematically extended. This snaps a vector node or an object to the nodes of another path. This is useful for aligning object horizontally or vertically, like with comic panels. This allows you to snap to a horizontal or vertical line from existing vector objects’ nodes (Unless dealing with resizing the height or width only, in which case you can drag the cursor over the path). This is useful for comic panels and similar print-layouts, though we recommend Scribus for more intensive work. Guides do not need to be visible for this, and are saved per document. This allows you to snap to guides, which can be dragged out from the ruler. ![]() Similar to Grid Snapping but with a grid having spacing = 1px and offset = 0px. This allows to snap to every pixel under the cursor. ![]() Grids are saved per document, making this useful for aligning your art work to grids, as is the case for game sprites and grid-based designs. This doesn’t need the grid to be visible. This will snap the cursor to the current grid, as configured in the grid docker. Now, let us go over what each option means: Grids ![]() For Vector layers, this goes even a step further, and we can let you snap to bounding boxes, intersections, extrapolated lines and more.Īll of these can be toggled using the snap pop-up menu which is assigned to Shift + S shortcut. Snapping is the ability to have Krita automatically align a selection or shape to the grids and guides, document center and document edges. In Krita 3.0, we now have functionality for Grids and Guides, but of course, this functionality is by itself not that interesting without snapping. ![]()
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