SOLVED QUESTIONS COMPLETE ANSWERS
BUNDLED RESOURCE
●● What is the quickest way to reset Photoshop's foreground and
background colors to
black and white?
Answer: Click the the letter "D" button on key board.
●● How can you temporarily hide the Toolbox, palettes, and options
bar?
Answer: Press [Tab].
●● How do you reset a tool back to its default settings?
Answer: Right-click the tool icon in the options bar and choose Reset
Tool from the shortcut menu.
●● What menu shows a list of all of Photoshop's palettes?
Answer: The Window menu.
●● Which procedure resets Photoshop's work area to its default
condition?
Answer: Choose Window > Workspace > Default Workspace.
,●● If you have several images open, what does the Window >Tile
Vertically command do?
Answer: Resizes and arranges all image windows so they are visible on
your screen.
●● What happens if you choose Window > Arrange > New Window?
Answer: A second view of the active fi le is created.
●● If several image fi les are open in Photoshop, what is the fastest way
to bring a
particular fi le to the "top of the pile?"
Answer: Choose the image from the bottom of the Window menu.
●● Digital cameras and scanners are used to ______ images.
Answer: Capture
●● Why does a low-resolution image not use as much fi le space as a
high-resolution
image?
Answer: Low-resolution images use fewer pixels.
●● What is a pixelized, or pixelated, image?
, Answer: An image that appears rough because individual pixels are large
enough to be
visible to the eye.
●● What changes when the Zoom Tool is used?
Answer: Your view of the image.
●● Which of the following is not a way to reset the zoom magnifi cation
of an image to
100%?
Answer: Click the Print Size button.
●● Using the Hand Tool is the same as doing what?
Answer: Adjusting the scroll bars at the side and bottom of the image.
●● If you are using another tool, what keyboard shortcut enables you to
temporarily use
the Hand Tool?
Answer: [Spacebar].
●● What does the Image Size dialog box's Constrain Proportions option
do?
Answer: Forces the image to keep its original proportions.