Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
Step Three:
In the zoomed-in view here, you can see
the number 5 in a rectangle in the top left
of the thumbnail. That's to let you know
two things: (1) this isn't just one photo, it's
a stack of photos, and (2) how many pho-
tos are in this stack. The view you're seeing
here is the stack's collapsed view (where
four similar photos are collapsed behind
the first one). To expand your stack and
see all the photos in it, just click directly on
that little number 5 (the expanded view is
shown in the next step), press S on your
keyboard, or click on one of the two little
thin bars that appear on either side of the
thumbnail. (To collapse the stack, just do
any of these again.) By the way, to add a
photo to an existing stack, just drag-and-
drop the photo you want to add right
onto the existing collapsed stack.
Step Four:
Here are a few things that will help you
in managing your stacks. The first photo
you select when creating a stack (the top
photo) will be the one that remains visible
when the stack is collapsed. If that's not
the photo you want to represent your
stack, you can make any photo in your
stack the top photo. First, expand the
stack, then Right-click directly on the little
rectangle with the photo number in it,
and choose Move to Top of Stack (as
shown here).
Continued
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