![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
| SAM Special 5 - FLASH !! (Oo-er!) | ||||||
| Well, you've seen the pictures all over the shop, so you'll already know that the SAM Coupe comes with its own art package. But what's it like? Well read on, cloth-head, and you might find out... | ||||||
First of all bear in mind that there isn't any attribute clash. No 'only two colours to a character square' here, matey - you can have as many as there are pixels. And considering that the actual number of colours available is 128, well, it's starting to sound quite good, isn't it? Carry on reading though, it ges better. Colours can be actually 'mixed' by the user - you can denote how much red, green and blue to use, and then allocate 'your own colours' to the Selection Chart. Then you can use the colours with the Paint Brush - you have everything from a fine hair-line brush to a big splodgy blob. Or maybe you feel the urge to be a wizard 'air brush artist' (or fancy doing some on-screen graffiti). Never fear, because there's the Spray Can to use too (it's pre-set with a fine nozzle spray, but you can select wider ones if you want). All other standard art package features are at your disposal too. There's the Fill Command, which will fill any shape you've drawn with either a solid colour or a pattern (such as 'brick wall', 'semitone' or one of the many others from the Pattern Selection icon). There are the 'shape commands', allowing you to create (with the utmost ease) circles, boxes and elipses. These can be filled or empty, depending upon the icon you click. And there are the line commands as well. The Continuous Line allows you to draw a series of straight lines (as few or as many as you wish), connected end to end. No faffing about with a ruler when you use a computer as an art tool. Or you can go for the Radiating Line - you choose a 'start point' and all lines drawn will radiate from it. Ideal for setting up perspective in a picture. There's a command called, erm, Blok (don't forget, Bo Jangeborg is Swedish). Highlighting this option means that you can take a square or rectangular portion of the screen (any size you wish) and move it around. You can then 'paste' it into position wherever you want, and as many times as you want, overlapping or separated. You can create brillo-coloured background patterns and suchlike (so you can even design some, er, curtain material or something). While you have a Blok pattern (or picture) in memory, you can manipulate it by pressing the keyboard. Mirroring, inverting, rotating - you can do all this and more. Similar to the Blok command is the Cut option, but instead of just cutting out a rectangle, you can remove, move and paste irregular shapes onto the screen. Want to move that banana to the left? No problem. There's the obligatory Text mode as well, so you can give your posters (or whatever) a bit of meaning with some well-chosen words, in a variety of type styles and point sizes (which is a posh way of saying 'largeness of the letters'). Not only can you produce stunning static graphics with the Flash! package, but there's actually a chance to make whole pictures move. That's right, there's an Animation icon. Yippee! You can create your very own cartoons, design alternative title sequences for TV programmes, draw a face in separate stages of speaking and then make it move (at any speed you want). The world is your oyster, as it were, limited only by your imagination. The whole package is WlMP controlled - that's Windows, Icons, Mouse and Pointers. You move the Pointer to an Icon with the Mouse (or joystick or keyboard) and 'click on it' to go into the required mode. Plus there are windows to 'pull down' from the top of the screen. These contain all kinds of other options, from Save (which, erm, saves a picture) to Spec Col (which instantly emulates the screen colours of the Speccy - but quite why you'd want to do this I'm not sure). Art Studio and Kempston Mouse owners will already be aware of what it's possible to do on-screen, artistically-speaking, but until now they've had to put up with the bete noir of the Speccy user - namely crap colour. Well, as I said before, everything you can do on Spectrum art packages you can do here - and quite a bit more besides (plus it's all in full colour). In fact Flash! is sort of like an ST art package that's had an accident involving the head (ie it's just as clever, but it's not quite as quick).
|
| READERS NOTE: The original YS articles on this site were written many many years ago, and should provide no indication WHATSOEVER of the author's present writing style. Judge these people on their current work, not articles they wrote decades ago. |
| All original YS text is still copyright to their original owners, including BOTH publishers and authors. Permission has been granted to reproduce these articles by a few of these owners - if you see your work on here and would like it to be taken down, e-mail me and I'll do it straightaway. All other pages have similar restrictions - email me for more details. None of the pages on this website may be reproduced in any way, nor sold to the general public (i.e. put onto a CD-ROM) without the consent of Nick Humphries and the author of each article. If you want to include any of these articles on a site or a CD, contact me for more instructions. |