Shows or hides the Shape Editor, which lets you modify the parameters of a shape (both the outline and fill) as well as copy and paste the parameters from one shape to another.
This window opens automatically when one of the Paint > Shape tools is selected.
The same options are contained in the Paint control panel and the values are kept synchronized between the two.
The values the Shape Editor displays depend on whether a Shape tool or an existing shape is active.
Slide to control the outline’s opacity. Opacity is a way of representing how “see-through” a brush's paint is. (Opacity is the opposite of transparency.) You cannot see anything underneath paint that has an opacity of 1. The lower the opacity, the more you can see through the paint. Paint that has an opacity of 0 is invisible.
Aspect controls how flat or circular the brush stamp is. An aspect ratio of 1 means the brush stamp is circular. The lower the aspect ratio, the flatter the brush stamp. The angle of a flat stamp is based on the brush Rotation.
Rotation is the angle (measured in degrees) of the brush stamp. If Aspect is less than 1, changing Rotation makes the brush stamp more horizontal (0) or more vertical (90). The range is 0 to 360.
Brushes apply paint to a canvas plane in strokes. A stroke consists of a series of closely spaced stamps. If you click a brush onto a canvas plane, instead of dragging the stylus, you apply a single stamp of paint. You can control how strokes are generated from stamps.
The Spacing slider controls the space between stamps in a stroke. Low values produce smooth strokes with no spaces between stamps. Higher values produce strokes that appear as a series of dots. The valid range is 0 to 255.
Slide to control the outline’s opacity. Opacity is a way of representing how “see-through” a brush's paint is. (Opacity is the opposite of transparency.) You cannot see anything underneath paint that has an opacity of 1. The lower the opacity, the more you can see through the paint. Paint that has an opacity of 0 is invisible.