![]() ![]() I don’t work for Adobe, but you can provide feedback by replying to any post here by the Bridge Team. But it is easy to see that users of the graphics applications may have a difficult time with this. So I am not opposed to the changes, I get along with them just fine. Personally, although I started out with the design applications, there are a lot of productivity refinements like these that I wish the graphics applications would adopt. For these users, you undock a panel just by dragging the tab (no modifier key), and you hide panels by pressing Tab. ![]() Users of these applications will welcome the changes as a genius move.īut…these changes will seem completely alien and unintuitive to users of Adobe graphics applications, such as Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign. These are well-established, traditional shortcuts in those applications. Now…these changes will seem completely natural and intuitive to power users of Adobe video applications, such as Premiere Pro, After Effects, Media Encoder, etc. The new way to undock a panel, as shown above, is to Command-drag until it pops out of the parent window.Previous versions were less flexible because you could expand only the center panel, now you can expand any panel. The new shortcut for expanding any panel is to hover over the panel you want to maximize, and press the ` key (top left corner of US English keyboard, under Esc). ![]() But for some other users, they will be welcome changes.įirst it’s useful to understand what some of the new shortcuts are. (You can still see the selected file full screen by pressing the spacebar, as before.) It’s a good question, because of some major changes Adobe made to Bridge are probably going to confuse a lot of people. That was the reason the center panel got bigger. And what happened to hitting tab to see all of the previews large in the preview window? By Tab actually used to do is hide the side panels. ![]()
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