In the illustration, since I want Deep Yellow to come after Pale Yellow, and then Peach, and finally Sugar Pink, I would first move Peach to the bottom, and then Sugar Pink, so it would come below Peach. (Command V) You have now moved a color to the bottom of the list, which is the only place you can move it.Ĭontinue, until they are in the order you desire. ( - button)You can't have two colors with the same name in the list.įinally, double click on the color that should have that name, and Paste it into the field. ( Command C) Once you have done this, remove that named color. Then, double click on the name of the original color, and Copy it to your clipboard. If you do, please write and tell me how!) (No, there's no way to insert it anywhere else or if there is, I don't know it. It will be added, with the default name, to the bottom. To copy colors to the bottom of the list, select the color you want to move, and drag it away from where it started, releasing it while still over the list window. ![]() Which means that you really need to plan it out first, because you don't want to be doing very much of this. However, that doesn't mean it can't be done it's just not elegant or simple. Sadly, it seems at this point that there's no easy way to arrange the order of colors in the list. Which is a shame, since in my opinion it's fantastic. If you are one of those, there's help for you in the form of a little app that will just open the picker at the end of the tutorial.Īll in all, this color picker is a very slick and extraordinarily useful tool but it seems a lot of people don't really know how to use it, because there's not any documentation to speak of. Still, there are some people who have a hard time getting it to show up at all. Others have some kind of key combination that lets you access it. Since it's the default System Color picker in most applications, like Mail or TextEdit, it's what pops up when you call for a different color.įor some, like Adobe ® Photoshop ®, you have to specify that you want to use the System Color Picker in the Prefs for the program. This tutorial has been updated to show the Color Picker in Mac OS 10.5.7 but if you are using a different version, I'm sure that you'll be able to figure out where things are in yours. ![]() OS X on the Mac introduced an amazingly powerful Color Picker, and it's only improved since then. Unless you did that to print, the page is more fun if you turn it on.
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![]() ![]() The big difference between this and other zombie games, though, is the sheer numbers of the living dead. Fortunately, you have some powerful weapons to take them apart with including axes, shotguns and rocket launchers. At key points you can shore up whatever area you re in by building defences and laying traps.Īnother is the speed of the zombies. It s a lot faster and bloodier than that and has you and three other survivors (either real players or AI) try to fight them off through whatever means necessary in a style that's reminiscent of Left 4 Dead, but with a few key differences. But it s definitely not a game that fits in the survival horror genre. ![]() This latest edition, Aftermath, contains both the original core game and a host of extra content released since it first launched.įollowing survivors in New York, Moscow, and Jerusalem, this is all about survival. The film, starring Brad Pitt, built out from that and set the visual tone and Saber Interactive, who you might remember from Quake Champions, came along and made a video game of it. The book was basically a giant exercise in world building that just so happened to have a few stories in it. World War Z was, in many ways, the perfect set up for tie-ins, sequels and spin-offs. The repair cost is proportional to damage dealt. Towers can be repaired to full health by selecting and manually repairing it, just like gatehouses. Tunnelers may also undermine the foundation of smaller towers, causing heavy damage. When a tower is destroyed without crumbling, all of its defenders lose half of their health as fall damage. On critically low health, the tower crumbles, burying or sending all units on top fly. ![]() Towers can be damaged with rocks, melee attacks and bashes from the battering ram, creating holes in it. Braziers can also be placed on a tower, further improving the combat capabilities of archers and Arabian bowmen by allowing them to ignite pitch ditches. Garrisoning units atop a tower gain height advantage: enemy projectiles from lower heights have a tendency to miss and they only inflict half of their damage. Tower engines ( ballistae and mangonels) can also be installed on top of larger towers. They require the presence of a single-tiled wall from any side direction in order to be accessible for infantry. ![]() Towers can be built in a large proximity of the player's keep and close to an ally's keep. Sometimes, a more brute but stronger and heavier battering ram was used for the task.Ĭastle towers remained well in use until the 17-18th century, even in the era of cannonballs and gunpowder. Rocks and iron balls were really effective in this, but very unreliable due to their long arming time and preparations. In sieges, towers were a crucial weak point of a castle and the attacking force often deployed siege equipment - mechanical devices that used heavy projectiles to damage the structure of a tower and crumble it. Grand towers were able to house heavy mechanical equipment such as mangonels and springalds (later cannons). ![]() Towers were later provided additional features that made retaliation possibilities better and safer: arrowslits, holes for pouring out hot liquids and stakes. These towers were built on a stable foundation so that they could easily shrug off catapulted rocks, as well as they were able to host groups of defenders on the top and in the medium levels. The springald, a bolt-firing defensive weaponFortified towers made of stone appeared early in castles of the Medieval Ages. While their utility was immeasureable, they were easy to demolish and remove by tools and weapons. Most of the time, watchtowers were also serving as beacons, having lit up flames high enough on their top to emit light visible in big distances. Watch towers have existed since early ages that could overlook swathes of areas and provided scouts an easier means of obtaining information about incoming threats, such as an army marching in formation. While there have been towers for industrial or civilian purposes, they also found great utility in defensive measures and fortifications. Towers are tall structures that are primarily constructed towards the air. |