MacA&D OSX 1.1.Excel Software are shipping MacA&D OSX See Mac OS X. 1.1 for requirements management, software modeling, code generation, reengineering and flexible report generation. Version 1.1 adds configurable title blocks in all diagram editors, new high performance editing of large text files, drag & drop for diagrams and text and customized requirements definition. All diagram editors now support a configurable title block for creating an engineering legend that can appear on the screen, in diagram printouts and in generated reports. A title block can have multiple rows and columns of resizable cells where each cell may contain static or editable text with user control over text fonts, sizes, color, justification and line wrapping. Data from user configurable fields associated with each diagram can be included in the title block. The user can also control title block placement and frame each page or entire multiple page diagrams for professionally printed design work and custom reports. Code, Report and Specification windows use a new high-performance editing engine that handles very large text files. A 20-MB file can be read or written in under 5 seconds versus minutes in Apple's TextEdit or other applications that use the text editing features built into the Mac OS. The new text editor supports a configurable tab size, smart line wrapping, undo and redo commands and drag and drop A graphical user interface (GUI) capability that lets you perform operations by moving the icon of an object with the mouse into another window or onto another icon. For example, files can be copied or moved by dragging them from one folder to another. . Often source code is aligned into blocks for easier reading. A selected block of text in the Code or Browse window can be shifted left or right. Diagram and table editors now support drag and drop. Whole or partial diagrams can be dragged to a document in a word processor or graphics application or to the desktop as a Picture Clipping file. Likewise, graphics from other applications or image files on disk can be dragged onto a MacA&D diagram. Accepted graphic formats include PICT, BMP (1) (BitMaP) Also known as a "bump" file, it is the native, bitmapped graphics format in Windows. A BMP can be saved in several color options: 1-, 4-, 8- and 24-bit color provide 2, 16, 256 and 16,000,000 colors respectively. BMP files use the .BMP or . , GIF GIF in full Graphics Interchange Format Standard computer file format for graphic images. GIF files use data compression to reduce the file size. The original version of the format was developed by CompuServe in 1987. , JPEG JPEG in full Joint Photographic Experts Group Standard computer file format for storing graphic images in a compressed form for general use. JPEG images are compressed using a mathematical algorithm. , TIFF, Photoshop, PNG (Portable Network Graphics) A bitmapped graphics file format endorsed by the World Wide Web Consortium. It is expected to eventually replace the GIF format, because there are lingering legal problems with GIFs. , QuickTime Image, TGA See TARGA. TGA - Targa Graphics Adaptor , SGI and Picture Clipping Files www.excelsoftware.com |
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