My problem is if I do it manually, I will create icons which is not the same size and when we use it, we align it, it looks not good.
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Browse All TopicsI have a big eps file, in this file I have a lot of icons, I want to cut these icons to separate file but i con know how to do. Is there any tool or tricks in dealing with situation? I don't want to cut each icon by hand, there are more than 150 icons.
Here is the gif file, the eps file is so big to attach.
Thank you very much!
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My mistake. I thought that you needed to keep these as eps files.
You can take a file like the gif that you uploaded and open it in Photoshop. Select your marquee tool. In the settings at the top Change the style from normal to fixed size. Type in the size that you want your icons to be including white space.
Now, when you use the marquee too to select an icon you can cut it out like a cookie cutter (select, CTRL-X, etc) and everyone will be the same size. Once you have an image copied to your clipboard, when you open a new Photoshop file, it will automatically ask you if you want it to be the size of the image that you cut out. Say yes (ENTER) and paste (CTRL-P), save (CTRL-S) and close (CTRL-W)
An alternate approach might be to open it in Photoshop, use the Slice tool to place grid lines to cut the images out along the rows and columns (being careful to evenly and regularly space the Slice lines), and then use Save for Web to save the entire file, which will be output as GIF or JPG files along with a HTML file which reassembles them in a table. Toss the HTML and any extra whitespace, then you're left with the icons.
Cheers,
LHerrou
I looked at this yesterday and tried a little cut-and-paste work in Photoshop along the lines of LHerrou, then came to the conclusion that even after I cut out all the icons, I wouldn't know how to name the icon files in a way that would suit your application. Anyway, it is an interesting problem, Good luck, ~Ray
So why not use a program like Printkey2000 which allows you to set the exact size by right clicking to create your icons. Or hire a student to do this for you. Provide them with a set way to name the files. See attached.
Printkey 2000 (freeware http://www.pcworld.com/dow
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by: D_BruggePosted on 2008-04-28 at 20:16:23ID: 21459394
My answer is no, not really. Yes there are methods such as putting each one on a different layer, but IMHO that is just a much time as clicking on an icon, pressing CTRL-X, CTRL-N, ENTER, CTRL-S, (type name) and CTRL-W
The problem is that while it's easy for humans to see each icon is separate and surrounded by white space, it's hard to make your computer program understand that. One way or another you end up doing some work, but it really doesn't take all that much time, it's just boring.
(The reason that I suggest CTRL-X is so that you don't have to think about which one you have done and which one you haven't - be sure to make a backup copy first!)