Hello People

This subject recently cropped up in the newsgroups and covers a technique I'd all but forgotten about (damned if I can remember where I read it first), but to me it is such fun, I think it is worth repeating here.

It involves the powerclip feature and it's unexpected effects on bitmaps.

Try this

[LIST]<LI>Import a bitmap into Draw
<LI>Select the graph paper tool (often hidden behing the polygon tool) and enter for example 3 rows and 3 columns
<LI>Enable snap to objects
<LI>Stretch the graph / paper grid from top left to bottom right of the bitmap
<LI>Select the bitmap and then enable the powerclip feature
<LI>Then select the graph paper grid as the container for the bitmap
<LI>Make the outline for the grid, no colour.
<LI>Now ungroup the graph paper grid

Presto one sliced and diced bitmap image.

But it gets better, it appears that any group of enclosed curve shapes can be used as a powerclip container, so you could created a jigsaw puzzle effect using the trim command on a rectangle.

Or simply power clip the bitmap inside a closed shape (like a rectangle), set the eraser tool to a very narrow value and using a freehand technique carve up the powerclip rectangle, when you have finished, break the powerclip object apart.

Now you might think you will end up with gigantic files sizes using the above method, as the bitmap appears to be replicated in each new object, but on saving the file you will find it is almost the same size as a file containing one bitmap plus a powerclip effect. It appears that Draw knows it only needs to reference one bitmap for all the little pieces.

Peter