Zoom is perfect for software tutorials and demonstrations when you need to display a detailed view of a user interface. We add a zoom-in effect to many of the videos we make at TechSmith. But the process can be used with whatever video editor you prefer.
In this post, you’ll learn how to zoom in on video and images with Camtasia. Just like a big-budget movie.Ĭamtasia lets you zoom in or out in your videos by changing the size or scale of clips and images.
The good news is that modern video editors, like Camtasia, give you the full capability to zoom in on a video.
Unfortunately, not everyone can be a Hollywood movie director with a zillion dollar budget and a once in a generation artistic eye. Not to mention advanced expertise with film and video. The process usually requires high priced cameras and recording equipment.
This is supposed to be the path to standardized vector graphics.Zooms are used all the time to create dramatic visual effects on the big screen. PS You'll have to ask Microsoft for direct SVG support in Word (Office is supposed to be HTML5 compliant, but clearly isn't IMO without native SVG support). Would a zoom-aware Copy Image help you out here? You could paste a sharp bitmap instead of a compressed one and get a much better transfer to PDF than the EMF is currently giving you. If you look at the Size and Position properties in Word, you can read off the exact zoom level, then re-copy the image at that custom level. The latter would be useful in Word, for example, if you paste in an image which is too big and is automatically reduced to fit in the margins. If I can get a reasonable quality image with some tweaks to the graphics object then I can break Copy Image into three items (copy at default size, copy at current zoom, copy at custom zoom). Glancing at the code, we do a TranslateTransform on the graphics object used to generate the image, but I don't see any graphics.ScaleTransform. If you're targeting anything that supports SVG-which word doesn't-I'd use the web viewers instead. So, if you're pasting to word, I'd recommend Paste Special for the meta file.
Unfortunately, it has been known to cause major problems for some printer drivers and non-MS tools. Short of figuring out how to identify the garbage data, then scanning and cleaning the EMF on the clipboard, there is nothing I can do about this. This results in very large purple or blue blobs if the meta files are pulled into tools that look at this field. NET libraries) that leaves an uninitialized field in the EMF properties for dashed lines. There is an extremely low-level bug (in the native GDI+ libraries, below the. PS IMO, the SVG is actually clearer than the EMF produced by NORMA. This currently prints one diagram per page in the generated PDF. Zooming individual diagrams is a pain, so I need to dig into HTML5 printing support at some point and figure out how to print wide diagrams (currently truncated, long diagrams go to the next page). I don't have any fit-to-page style support or zoom settings for individual diagrams. orm.aspx?scale=2.4 will make the 100% zoom level on the page twice the normal size. The diagram size can be adjusted with the zoom dropdown on the page, or with the scale query parameter on the page.
If the diagram highlights, expand the element. Once you've located the svg for your diagram, you can then right click on the collapsed svg element and 'Copy HTML' to get the raw svg, which you should be able to use with a PDF editor. You'll see parts of the browser window highlight as you mouse over the html for the elements.
In Chrome, open the JavaScript console with Ctrl-Shift-J, click on the Elements tab (upper left of the debug window), and expand the html elements until you find the svg you need. orm files locally with the web viewers.ĭepending on how low-level you want to get, you can also grab the SVG for a diagram directly from the web viewers using a browser debugger. You'll need Chrome, Firefox or IE10+ to open. I haven't tried any of the Adobe-native PDF printers. I've also tried Bullzip's PDF printer, but the results are nowhere near as sharp as the built-in Chrome PDF print. I'd recommend Chrome, which has a built-in 'print to pdf' feature. NORMA doesn't have direct PDF support, but the web-viewers at and display ORM diagrams (but not the relational view) from any browser that can print to PDF.