There is a "Command path" box in the pane below, browse for the EXE or folder that you wanted to add. A new command is created, rename the caption, and set an icon (paste the icon's path) or use one of the built-in icons. You can even choose a custom background should you not like the ones that LaunchBar Commander ships with. Next, choose the background you want, set its color and transparency. You can also set the dock to autohide, autoslide or reserve a space for it. Select a display style for the icons, menu, and border (optional). Click on the "Add Node" menu button (or right-click on a dock > Insert) and select "Add child - Dock": you may rename it to what you want. Shortcuts that you place in the dock are called Nodes. You can customize the pre-made dock or create your own. Undocking restores the panel to its original size. This brings up the LaunchBar Commander settings window, that you can use to customize the dock. Right-click the tray icon and select preferences. Left-click on the tray icon to access the shortcuts that were on the dock are available from the tray. Hitting the close button minimizes the program to the system tray. You can drag the docked panel to any of the four sides of the screen. One of the options includes the ability to dock the panel, i.e., place it on the edge of the screen. This has a few options to resize, center, rebuild the bar. Right-click inside the dock to view its context-menu. The program plays a sound when you click on a button which you can disable in the options. This is pretty useful for opening files quickly without having to navigate around in Explorer or opening Control Panel or the Start Menu. The Control Panel menu lists all the options available in Windows' namesake, the Documents menu displays links to files in your Documents folder, and so on. Clicking one of the buttons opens up a menu with the contents of the selected option. The Dock has 4 buttons: Control Panel, Documents, Start Menu and a Sample Menu. This is a floating panel, so you can drag it around the screen. A small panel titled "My First Dock" will open, click on the edges to resize it. Upon running it for the first time, you will be greeted by a message that says the program is donation ware (made by Mouser, a popular DonationCoder developer). Image.SCALE_REPLICATE: Use the image scaling algorithm embodied in the ReplicateScaleFilter class.LaunchBar Commander is a free application that's similar and offers a lot of customization options on top of that.Image.SCALE_AREA_AVERAGING: Use the Area Averaging image scaling algorithm.Image.SCALE_SMOOTH: Choose an image-scaling algorithm that gives higher priority to image smoothness than scaling speed.Image.SCALE_FAST: Choose an image-scaling algorithm that gives higher priority to scaling speed than smoothness of the scaled image.Image.SCALE_DEFAULT: Use the default image-scaling algorithm.You can use any of the following algorithms: There are algorithms that produce a very precise result, however these take a large time to complete. Notice the last parameter: it tells the runtime the algorithm you want to use for resizing. Obviously, replace newWidth and newHeight with the dimensions of the specified image. Just do: Image newImage = yourImage.getScaledInstance(newWidth, newHeight, Image.SCALE_DEFAULT) If you have an, resizing it doesn't require any additional libraries.
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