• Dangdoggo
      link
      fedilink
      3011 months ago

      There’s no “Shape” tool. You could just select a circular area in an empty layer and fill it though.

    • @Swiggles
      link
      2211 months ago

      You can, it is very unintuitive though. You draw the shape using the eilpse tool and set a border for the selection.

      It’s not hard, but there is really no way to figure this out without ever looking for a tutorial.

      • @figaro@lemdro.id
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2611 months ago

        It’s absolutely stupid design and more difficult than it needs to be.

        I’ll say it - Photoshop is infinitely more intuitive than gimp for the average person. Sure, if you are fucking determined, I’m sure you can figure it out eventually. You can even make it work. But if you say it is easier than Photoshop, you are wrong.

        I love FOSS stuff but way too many people are delusional about the pros and cons of it. There are absolutely cons.

        I stand with op.

        • @Swiggles
          link
          711 months ago

          I don’t believe that you can even figure out half of the things yourself if you are determined. There is no way you can use it without looking up tutorials for even basic things.

          I fully agree in case my precious comment wasn’t clear. It is a mess!

      • @WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        311 months ago

        All this time I was using the ellipse tool, filling it, then shrinking my selection and deleting.

        Ah well, I learned Inkscape recently and it’s a better tool for stuff like that anyway.

    • @kono_throwaway_da@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      12
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      GIMP 2 is utter dogshit in terms of user experience.

      GIMP 3, the version that is supposed to make everything easier, hasn’t been released yet. ^(it’s been years and I have given up hoping)

      The situation sucks, but there aren’t that many developers working on GIMP in the first place. Certainly not as many as Photoshop.