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Which picture element is changed when you edit a raster image in photoshop?

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Question ajoutée par Samar Saleh , Community Manager , Bayt.com
Date de publication: 2014/04/09
السيد ابراهيم السيد solomon
par السيد ابراهيم السيد solomon , فني صيانة حاسب آلي , الشرق تريد

Of course it's the "Pixel"

إسلام صلاح
par إسلام صلاح , Creative Art Director , Demo production agency

Perfect question .. Pixel 

Alen Ajanovic
par Alen Ajanovic , 2D - 3D Graphic designer, 3D animator, IT administrator, hardware maintenance , FIST Production d.o.o.

Pixel.

Hicham Ezzahir
par Hicham Ezzahir , IT Support , Self-employed

Understanding Smart Objects

Smart Objects are layers that contain image data from raster or vector images, such as Photoshop or Illustrator files. Smart Objects preserve an image’s source content with all its original characteristics, enabling you to perform nondestructive editing to the layer.

In Photoshop CC and CS6, you can embed the contents of an image into a Photoshop document. In Photoshop CC, you can also create linked smart objects whose contents are referenced from external image files. The contents of a linked smart object are updated when its source image file changes.

Linked smart objects are distinct from duplicated instances of a smart object within a Photoshop document. With linked smart objects, you can use a shared source file across multiple Photoshop documents.

With Smart Objects, you can:

  • Perform nondestructive transforms. You can scale, rotate, skew, distort, perspective transform, or warp a layer without losing original image data or quality because the transforms don’t affect the original data.

  • Work with vector data, such as vector artwork from Illustrator, that otherwise would be rasterized in Photoshop.

  • Perform nondestructive filtering. You can edit filters applied to Smart Objects at any time.

  • Edit one Smart Object and automatically update all its linked instances.

  • Apply a layer mask that’s either linked or unlinked to the Smart Object layer.

  • Try various designs with low-resolution placeholder images that you later replace with final versions.

You can’t perform operations that alter pixel data—such as painting, dodging, burning, or cloning—directly to a Smart Object layer, unless it is first converted into a regular layer, which will be rasterized. To perform operations that alter pixel data, you can edit the contents of a Smart Object, clone a new layer above the Smart Object layer, edit duplicates of the Smart Object, or create a new layer.

Note:

When you transform a Smart Object that has a Smart Filter applied to it, Photoshop turns off filter effects while the transform is being performed. Filter effects are applied again after the transform is complete. See About Smart Filters.

Regular layer and Smart Object in Layers panel. Icon in lower right corner of thumbnail indicates Smart Object.

(Photoshop CC) A linked Smart Object in the Layers panel

Dina Jambi
par Dina Jambi , PHD candidate , Geography/ Humanities School/ USM

Pixals

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