Читать книгу Blender For Dummies - Jason van Gumster - Страница 22
CUSTOMIZING HEADERS
ОглавлениеAll editors in Blender have a horizontal region called the header that usually runs along the top of the editor. The header usually features specialized menus or buttons specific to the editor you’re using. Here are some ways you can customize the header:
Hide the header. If you right-click the header, you get a menu with the Show Header check box that you can use to toggle the visibility of the header. When the header is hidden, you’re left with only a small down-arrow icon in the right corner of the editor. If the header is at the bottom of the editor, the arrow icon points up and appears at the bottom right of the editor. Left-click this icon and the header reappears.
Scroll the header’s menus. There will be occasions while working that you make an area too narrow to show all the menus and buttons in it. No worries. All headers in all of Blender’s editors are scrollable. If you have a narrow area where parts of the header are obscured, hover your mouse cursor over the header and scroll your mouse wheel to slide the contents of the header left and right. You could also middle-click and drag the header to do the same thing.
Hide menus in the header. Of course, maybe you don’t want to be constantly scrolling the contents of your header. You’d rather just save space by hiding the menus. Right-click the header and toggle the Show Menus option to collapse the menus for that header down to a single button with an icon of three lines (sometimes called a hamburger menu).
Change the location of the header. You can also change the location of the header to either the top or bottom of the editor it belongs to. To do so, right-click the header and choose Flip to Top (or Bottom, depending on where your header currently is).
Hide or show Tool Settings. This one is specific to the 3D Viewport. If you right-click the header for the 3D Viewport, there’s an additional check box that you can use to toggle the visibility for settings on your active tool and regain a bit of screen real estate.
You may notice another option in the View ⇒ Area menu, Toggle Fullscreen Area. This option gives you even more screen space by hiding the menus and workspace tabs at the top of the Blender window. The hotkey to toggle this is Ctrl+Alt+Spacebar.