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Photoshop for macbook pro
Photoshop for macbook pro









  1. #Photoshop for macbook pro windows 10#
  2. #Photoshop for macbook pro android#
  3. #Photoshop for macbook pro pro#
  4. #Photoshop for macbook pro mac#

Retina and HiDPI are basically the same concept. They also started using 2x or higher pixel density, which they call HiDPI displays.

#Photoshop for macbook pro android#

Having a more detailed, less jaggy screen display was such a good and appealing idea that Windows and Android did the same thing. The confusion started when Apple began using higher pixel density displays, which they branded Retina, and are 2x pixel density on the desktop (higher on mobile). In fact, just as it is in any web browser on macOS or Windows. And you can see that the browser version is blown up 2x, just as it is on the Mac.

#Photoshop for macbook pro windows 10#

The picture below is of an image in Windows 10 on a HiDPI display, shown in Photoshop on the left, and in the Microsoft Edge web browser on the right, both at the magnification that each application defines as 100%. Because you are also going to run into it in Windows.

#Photoshop for macbook pro mac#

It might be crazy if it’s based on the assumption that this is only a Mac problem. This might be too late but I'm giving up and switching to Windows Is that crazy? It's pretty crazy when you stop to think about it. I don't use illustrator, though hearing users of illustrator being in a seamless environment sounds lovely, and I wish Photoshop would make the jump.īasically Adobe can point the PS engine to run in low-res mode but by keeping the UI and fonts etc. If you open a file that is 1440 x 900 in low-res mode this time regardless of the PPI you set it at, it will also then fill exactly 100% of your screen. So if you open a file that is 2880 x 1800 in normal PS mode regardless of the PPI you set it at, it will fill exactly 100% of your screen.

photoshop for macbook pro photoshop for macbook pro

So it goes back to assuming your screen's actual amount of pixels is 1440 x 900. Opening Photoshop in Low res mode basically tells photoshop to look at the resolution of your screen determined by the OS rather than the actual amount of pixels on screen. Photoshop assumes you're running things at 2880 x 1800. Because the finder assumes you're running things at 1440 x 900. This is why things are 4 times smaller within Photoshop than when you open them in the Finder. What the photoshop engine is doing it seems is assuming that you are running a system 4 times smaller than what the OS is translating to you with all 2880 x 1800 pixels on screen displaying the system. Which means that if you were running everything natively, (which apple doesn't even give you the option of doing - the most pixels it allows you to display on your screen at once is 1920 x 1200)- but let's assume that you could run everything at 2880 x 1800, everything would look 4 times smaller. Which leads to whatever youre seeing on screen to be blown up 4 times (1/2 length and 1/2 of width = 1/4 of display hence 4x) than if you'd be seeing 2880 x 1800 natively. The Mac automatically adjusts the Retina display to exactly half the length and half the width to 1440 x 900.

#Photoshop for macbook pro pro#

No matter how we cut it, my MacBook Pro Retina 15'' has exactly 2880 x 1800 pixels on screen.įor the sake of visibility and clarity you can go into Settings -> Display and adjust your viewing ratio relative to the 2880 x 1800. The way Photoshop behaves is quite simple (though unintuitive): I tried that on my MacBook Pro Retina that has a resolution of 220 ppi but no difference. Need some answers, or it's time to look for new options. the PS program's dialogue text is pixelated! Something is very 'off' here. I have relied on Photoshop as a pixel-perfect product for ~20yrs. Pretty close!, but upon close examination, there's pixelation in CS6 side that's not there in the actual image. Here's a screenshot of the SAME IMAGE on CS6 (at 200%) and Chrome (at 100%).

photoshop for macbook pro

I'm attaching a screenshot of he SAME 480x480 IMAGE in photoshop, chrome and safari.Ĭan you imagine, as a web designer, how it's hard to work like this? There is no longer the 1:1 ratio that I get from CS6 on my iMac or PC. Why can't Adobe PS render at same size as every other program? As a designer, 'lo-res mode' is not an option. I'm on MacBookPro Retina 15" running CS6 13.0.6. I've been combing the web for a solution and nothing in site.











Photoshop for macbook pro