Adobe Fireworks
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (March 2009) |
Fireworks CS4 on Windows Vista |
|
| Developer(s) | Adobe (formerly Macromedia) |
|---|---|
| Stable release | CS4 (10.0.3.011) / 2009-5-6 |
| Written in | C++ |
| Operating system | Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows |
| Type | Vector graphics editor |
| License | Proprietary |
| Website | Adobe Fireworks Homepage |
Adobe Fireworks (formerly Macromedia Fireworks), known as Fw for short, is a bitmap and vector graphics editor. It was originally developed by Macromedia, which Adobe acquired in 2005, and aimed at web designers (with features such as: slices, the ability to add hotspots etc.). It is designed to integrate easily with other former Macromedia products, such as Adobe Dreamweaver and Adobe Flash. It is available as a stand-alone product or bundled with CS4. Previous versions were bundled with Macromedia Studio.
Contents |
[edit] Vector and bitmap editing
The emphasis of Fireworks is on vector editing. Vector objects in Fireworks can be resized with no loss of quality, just as in Adobe Illustrator, though unlike Illustrator, it provides bitmap editing tools in the same application.[1] A range of Macromedia FreeHand's vector tools were incorporated into the release of Fireworks 8. Bitmap objects by their nature suffer a loss in quality (known as "pixellation") whether resized in Fireworks, Adobe ImageReady, Photoshop, or any other program. Adobe has recently announced the proposal for future upgrades, or possibly even an extended version of Fireworks for Microsoft's new operating system Windows 7.
[edit] User Interface
Fireworks' user interface is in line with the rest of Adobe Creative Suite 4. Its interface is similar to that of Adobe Photoshop CS4.
At least on Mac OS X, it is possible to display the application in Multiple Document Interface mode or the standard viewing mode where all toolbars float freely on the screen.
[edit] CSS Sprite Support
As of Fireworks CS4, CSS Sprite is currently not supported. However, some workarounds involved manually creating a CSS Sprite in a separate file from the main comp, then draw Image Maps on top of the CSS Sprite. After export, 3rd party tools would import the Image Map, read coordinates from the Image Map and re-calculate CSS positioning during CSS Sprite Export. It remains to be seen whether native support for CSS Sprites will be released in the next version of Fireworks.
[edit] Features and Functionalities
[edit] Hierarchical Layers
Fireworks supports layering the graphic file. Deep child layers are also possible. All the layers can be accessed from the Layers panel.
[edit] 9 Slice scaling
This is a feature that can ensure the rounded rectangles to maintain their roundness when transformed depending on where the guides are placed. CS4 has this feature exposed as a tool. With this feature introduction in CS3 version, its usage was limited to symbols.
[edit] Symbols
Re-usable elements can be converted into symbols and placed at multiple pages or on the same page. When the master symbol is edited, the changes are propagated to all the instances of that symbol automatically.
[edit] Adobe Creative Suite Integration
Fireworks understands the file formats ai, psd, eps, which designers use in a team allowing for better workflows across multiple Adobe applications.
[edit] Export to
A file can be exported as tiff,flat png (8,24,32 bit), JPEG, Animated GIF, gif, psd, swf, PICT, BMP, WBMP. The individual pages in file can also be converted to multiple pages of a single PDF file.
[edit] States
Earlier known as Frames, these are used for animation purposes. They are also used for defining the behaviors in cases of symbol buttons like Up, Down, Over.
[edit] User Base
Most web designers who use Fireworks are front-end coders who appreciate its Object-Oriented approach to web design. With vector tools for creating non-destructive scalable elements plus tools specialized for the web, Fireworks has been the platform of choice for many.
Some longtime users of Photoshop have found it difficult to migrate their web design work flow to Fireworks since many have been devoted Photoshop users for over a decade. With CS4, however, Adobe lends support to Photoshop users; improving Fireworks' ability to import Photoshop files. Nonetheless, Adobe's cancellation of Image Ready in favor of Fireworks may imply that they view Fireworks as the better tool for the web design community.
[edit] References
- ^ For Illustrator vs. Fireworks comparison see: http://www.timthompson.co.uk/blog/2006/06/illustrator-vs-fireworks.html
| This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2008) |
[edit] External links
|
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||

