My default to open image attachments from email is set to open in chrome. That's the way I like it! That way I can just copy and paste to corel without actually saving the image some where. I don't like having two copies, one in the corel file and one sitting somewhere else . However, some images when copied have a black background. I can open them with ie and copy and paste with no problem. Anyone have any ideas why this behavior is happening? Maybe a chrome plug-in or something?
MikeWe said:MS Edge, which I believe is also Chrome-based, does place the transparent PNG in such a way that CD interprets it properly.
What is correct? Like it looks on the web?
David Milisock said: MikeWe MS Edge, which I believe is also Chrome-based, does place the transparent PNG in such a way that CD interprets it properly.
MikeWe MS Edge, which I believe is also Chrome-based, does place the transparent PNG in such a way that CD interprets it properly.
Cool I tried lots of web sites and couldn't find a transparent PNG.
The object on the right is it a flattened image or layered with a black layer?
Here's the image I used...
Thanks worked for me on Edge and X8 so I'm good!
David Milisock said: Thanks worked for me on Edge and X8 so I'm good!
You are, but 70% of all internet users are not.
Why is that number so weird?
Do we care that someone on a phone can't paste into CorelDraw?
I say that because if you search 40 different web sites and eliminate the phone systems IE of some version and Edge clearly lead the desktop use.
When you get into tablets and phones or Phablets the numbers move to Chrome and Android.
It appears that some browsers generate hits differently, I prefer to use information from the sites that are business based rather then social and there IE and Edge come in some times well over 50%.
David Milisock said:Do we care that someone on a phone can't paste into CorelDraw?
Didn't know a CorelDRAW version was available to use on phones.
David Milisock said:... It appears that some browsers generate hits differently, I prefer to use information from the sites that are business based rather then social and there IE and Edge come in some times well over 50%.
Now that is really funny.
There is only one research company that does browser statistics that I am aware of that has ever had IE at 50% for desktop usage since Chrome and Firefox became remotely popular. And that company has always put IE at ~50%. 8 other companies that track desktop browser usage put IE far below. Less than the generous 30% I gave it. Pretty suspect statistics when the other companies are roughly similar for desktop usage and one company alone has IE desktop usage so high, isn't it?
Of course, it is possible one company alone is getting it correct...
Mike