When you edit an image, selection is almost always the first step of the operation: First you select the area you want to operate on, and then you do something to it (for example, move it to another region of the Paint window, cut or copy it, or change its dimensions).
The Paint window offers two selection tools: the Marquee tool, which selects a rectangular area, and the Lasso, which allows you to make a selection of any shape. Each has a number of options that can significantly change the tool's behavior.
In the Paint Tool palette, select the Marquee tool (Figure 6.11).
The pointer becomes a crosshair pointer.
In the Paint window, position the crosshairs pointer at one corner of your selection.
Hold down the mouse button and drag the pointer diagonally to the opposite corner to create a selection box around the artwork (Figure 6.12).
A dotted rectangle called a marquee appears as you drag.
Release the mouse button when the marquee encloses what you want to select.
Double-click the Marquee tool to select everything in the Paint window.
Select the Marquee tool and hold down the mouse button until the Options pop-up menu appears (Figure 6.13).
Select one of the four options (Figure 6.14).
Shrink makes the rectangular selection marquee tighten around whatever object you've selected.
No Shrink leaves the selection exactly as you draw it.
Lasso creates a form-fitting selection around whatever object you've selected, as though you had used the Lasso tool.
See Thru Lasso is similar to the Lasso option, but it makes all white pixels in the selection transparent. This is useful if you want to copy and paste the selected area on top of another image, and you want portions of the background to show through.
Though it seems odd for the Marquee tool to behave like a lasso, the Lasso and See Thru Lasso options have the advantage of combining the versatility of lasso-style selection with the simplicity of marquee-style selection.
In the Paint Tool palette, click the Lasso tool (Figure 6.15).
In the Paint window, position the Lasso wherever you want to begin your selection.
Hold down the mouse button and drag the Lasso around the area you want to select (Figure 6.16).
Release the mouse button.
Director highlights the selected area.
If you did not entirely enclose your selection, Director automatically connects its starting and ending points.
You can use the Lasso tool to select a polygon. Hold down the Alt key (Windows) or Option key (Mac) while dragging the Lasso to create an anchor point and draw a straight selection line. Add line segments to enclose the artwork. Double-click to end your selection (Figure 6.17).
Select the Lasso tool and hold down the mouse button until the Options pop-up menu appears (Figure 6.18).
Select an option (Figure 6.19):
No Shrink selects the entire area that you enclose with the Lasso.
Lasso makes the selection marquee tighten around whatever object you've selected. Director tries to identify an object's border by looking for color differences among pixels.
See Thru Lasso makes all the white pixels in your selection transparent.
In the Paint window, make a selection with the Marquee or Lasso tool.
Drag the selection to a new location (Figure 6.20).
Make a selection with the Marquee or Lasso tool.
Hold down the Alt key (Windows) or Option key (Mac), and drag the selection to a new place.
The original image is left in place.
Make a selection with the Marquee tool (you can't use the Lasso for this task).
Hold down the Ctrl key (Windows) or Command key (Mac), click anywhere in the selection, and drag (Figure 6.21).
Drag away from the center to stretch the image; drag toward the center to compress.
To maintain the selection's original proportions when you stretch or compress, press Ctrl+Shift (Windows) or Command+Shift (Mac) while dragging.
Make a selection with the Marquee or Lasso tool.
Press the Backspace or Delete key.
The selected area is erased.
To erase the entire contents of the Paint window, double-click the Eraser tool in the Paint Tool palette.