Corel has more features, Its like combo of ACAD, SKETCHUP, and Ai but Ai is easy and direct to the point when you make any design. What i like in corel is, its friendly user when it comes to cnc machines. coz mostly their format is the plug-ins for machines.
Hi, Great videos all the time, i'd like to know how to create and get the nearby colors when hovering the mouse on one of colors on the palette. it is like at 3:59 from this video when you filling the color of the side
hi, I'm running this on Mac osx and I wanted to know how you got the names of the inspector panels to show up on the right of the screen. currently I only have the icons showing up, but coming from illustrator I think I'd find it easier to have the names there till I learn what each icon is. thanks
Hello I am trying to export a Corel 2021 file to Ai with some text boxes and it always breaks the texts, the texts got separated by lines and doesn’t export as a whole complete text to be able to edit and correct. Let me know the best options to do it
Not possible, you only have two choices. 1. convert the texts to curves before exporting to illustrator (won't be editable in Illustrator) 2. Export the file to Illustrator, create a new text frame, and type or copy and paste the original text.
I am a long time Corel Draw user when it comes to assigning command for each tool I can say it is better than Illustrator 1 short cut key 3 tools can be assign unlike in AI you can't even use 1 letter without using Alt Ctrl or Shift, in Corel for example delete, no outline, no fill is no the same letter or key without stressing my right hand.
There are some nice new things in 2021. Not enough to switch back from Illustrator for me though. Illustrator is still better in the ways that matter most to me.
They are identical in what can be done for most users. I like to use CorelDraw ... but can do the same things in Illustrator ... a bit slower. I like Illustrator's graphic styles ... also the export to photoshop is more comprehensive for later editing but for most things CorelDraw's ps export is pretty decent. I am not an expert ...
yeah everything, except for fucking basic dimesnions that you have to buy @150$, 1 step move on corel takes 3 steps on AI. that's how clunk it is and buggy mess cloud.
@@prodj.mixapeofficial6431 Illustrator and Coreldraw are similar programs, but not the same. As someone mentioned above, Coreldraw is better for stuff like sign making. Illustrator has it's own advantages and specialties. So it doesn't have the dimensioning tools. I can see how that is very frustrating. Likewise, Coreldraw is very weak for color separations and people are using very expensive plugins to do color separations in Coreldraw. Illustrator has all of that stuff very well developed in both Photoshop and Illustrator. You could go back and forth like that with what one program has, and the other does not have. The comparisons are fun but at the end of the day, you just have to use the one that is right for the work you're doing. As for stability and reliability though, in my experience of 26 years or so, Coreldraw is among the worst quality software I've ever used, and Photopaint is even worse. I used to joke with a co-worker that used Coreldraw about it. We'd be standing there by his PC and Coreldraw would just crash without nobody touching it. It was hilarious. Coreldraw is incredibly buggy. Some features such as the path operations, trim, simplify, etc have never worked properly and still don't. I used to post results of it every year for Corel to see. Sometimes they would ask for more information or examples, and sometimes they don't, but they never fix it. I'm not a fan of the cloud stuff in Adobe. I have no use for it. I ignore it therefore if there are bugs there, it's easy to just not use it. Problem solved. Sometimes I use the library feature just to get an image back and forth from Illustrator to Photoshop with transparency because the PC version of Photoshop can't copy/paste with transparency. The Mac version can. Corel's asset management program is comically poor quality. A million miles away from Adobe Bridge. Like, you take one look at it and just like Photo-paint there's almost no reason to even install it. In the Coreldraw "suite", the only software I would bother to install is Coreldraw. The rest of the suite is junk.
This would be a far more effective video if you were actually explaining what you're doing and why it's better that Illustrator. That same beat over and over makes it nightmare and easy to click away.
yeah everything, except for fucking basic dimesnions that you have to buy @150$, 1 step move on corel takes 3 steps on AI. that's how clunk it is and buggy mess cloud.
...But for farmers? haha, kidding man. I thinnk it's actaully not the software U're using, but I think it's importantly how best U know the software. Master your software, and there U go.
When it comes to graphic design, it really doesn't matter whether you are using a Mac or a Windows PC. As long as the program you are using runs smoothly on your machine, you are good to go.
@@techruzz Both sides have real advantages. I think the visual nature of MacOS does lend itself more to creatives. On the Windows side you have touchscreen PCs that support stylus. This is a big one for artists. On the Windows side, you also have much better backwards compatibility, which probably comes as a result of Windows just truly stagnating. Apple doesn't care much about backwards compatibility. When you upgrade the OS very often you're going to say goodbye to a perfectly functioning printer, scanner, or other hardware because it no longer works with the new OS. But in terms of actually working with the OS, MacOS makes me smile at how good it is, while Windows makes me furious sometimes. Just, yelling at the screen, stopping my work, going online and venting my frustrations on a forum somewhere. Microsoft is awful.
Corel has more features, Its like combo of ACAD, SKETCHUP, and Ai but Ai is easy and direct to the point when you make any design.
What i like in corel is, its friendly user when it comes to cnc machines. coz mostly their format is the plug-ins for machines.
Hi, Great videos all the time, i'd like to know how to create and get the nearby colors when hovering the mouse on one of colors on the palette. it is like at 3:59 from this video when you filling the color of the side
hi, I'm running this on Mac osx and I wanted to know how you got the names of the inspector panels to show up on the right of the screen. currently I only have the icons showing up, but coming from illustrator I think I'd find it easier to have the names there till I learn what each icon is.
thanks
Hello I am trying to export a Corel 2021 file to Ai with some text boxes and it always breaks the texts, the texts got separated by lines and doesn’t export as a whole complete text to be able to edit and correct. Let me know the best options to do it
Not possible, you only have two choices.
1. convert the texts to curves before exporting to illustrator (won't be editable in Illustrator)
2. Export the file to Illustrator, create a new text frame, and type or copy and paste the original text.
Corel has earned me far more than the cost of the software, nobody wants a steep learning curve, Corel is so much better in 2023.
I am a long time Corel Draw user when it comes to assigning command for each tool I can say it is better than Illustrator 1 short cut key 3 tools can be assign unlike in AI you can't even use 1 letter without using Alt Ctrl or Shift, in Corel for example delete, no outline, no fill is no the same letter or key without stressing my right hand.
There are some nice new things in 2021. Not enough to switch back from Illustrator for me though. Illustrator is still better in the ways that matter most to me.
Illustrator and corel draw use is technically different corel is best for panaflex work and illustrator for others like freelancing
They are identical in what can be done for most users. I like to use CorelDraw ... but can do the same things in Illustrator ... a bit slower. I like Illustrator's graphic styles ... also the export to photoshop is more comprehensive for later editing but for most things CorelDraw's ps export is pretty decent. I am not an expert ...
@@ICSAMMAN the export option of corel draw has a huge of ways
Illustrator have all this functions for many years, only calendar wizard but is a Macro… Illustrator have a tons of Scripts
there is in excell template, :)))
I think illustrator has almost all the stuffs in there already. I think only the calendar wizard is what's lacking in Ai
yeah everything, except for fucking basic dimesnions that you have to buy @150$, 1 step move on corel takes 3 steps on AI. that's how clunk it is and buggy mess cloud.
@@prodj.mixapeofficial6431 Illustrator and Coreldraw are similar programs, but not the same. As someone mentioned above, Coreldraw is better for stuff like sign making. Illustrator has it's own advantages and specialties. So it doesn't have the dimensioning tools. I can see how that is very frustrating. Likewise, Coreldraw is very weak for color separations and people are using very expensive plugins to do color separations in Coreldraw. Illustrator has all of that stuff very well developed in both Photoshop and Illustrator. You could go back and forth like that with what one program has, and the other does not have. The comparisons are fun but at the end of the day, you just have to use the one that is right for the work you're doing.
As for stability and reliability though, in my experience of 26 years or so, Coreldraw is among the worst quality software I've ever used, and Photopaint is even worse. I used to joke with a co-worker that used Coreldraw about it. We'd be standing there by his PC and Coreldraw would just crash without nobody touching it. It was hilarious. Coreldraw is incredibly buggy. Some features such as the path operations, trim, simplify, etc have never worked properly and still don't. I used to post results of it every year for Corel to see. Sometimes they would ask for more information or examples, and sometimes they don't, but they never fix it.
I'm not a fan of the cloud stuff in Adobe. I have no use for it. I ignore it therefore if there are bugs there, it's easy to just not use it. Problem solved. Sometimes I use the library feature just to get an image back and forth from Illustrator to Photoshop with transparency because the PC version of Photoshop can't copy/paste with transparency. The Mac version can.
Corel's asset management program is comically poor quality. A million miles away from Adobe Bridge. Like, you take one look at it and just like Photo-paint there's almost no reason to even install it. In the Coreldraw "suite", the only software I would bother to install is Coreldraw. The rest of the suite is junk.
sos un capo!!!
This would be a far more effective video if you were actually explaining what you're doing and why it's better that Illustrator. That same beat over and over makes it nightmare and easy to click away.
These reasons were more like a joke
Speak up please
Corel is not for designers
Thanks for confirming, you are not a designer
yeah everything, except for fucking basic dimesnions that you have to buy @150$, 1 step move on corel takes 3 steps on AI. that's how clunk it is and buggy mess cloud.
...But for farmers? haha, kidding man. I thinnk it's actaully not the software U're using, but I think it's importantly how best U know the software. Master your software, and there U go.
@@naveendaniya for programmers,hehe
How many step for swap color fill stroke in corel?😂
Windows? I can't take this seriously already. What self respecting graphic artist is using a windows machine? My soul hurts now
When it comes to graphic design, it really doesn't matter whether you are using a Mac or a Windows PC. As long as the program you are using runs smoothly on your machine, you are good to go.
@@techruzz Both sides have real advantages. I think the visual nature of MacOS does lend itself more to creatives. On the Windows side you have touchscreen PCs that support stylus. This is a big one for artists. On the Windows side, you also have much better backwards compatibility, which probably comes as a result of Windows just truly stagnating. Apple doesn't care much about backwards compatibility. When you upgrade the OS very often you're going to say goodbye to a perfectly functioning printer, scanner, or other hardware because it no longer works with the new OS. But in terms of actually working with the OS, MacOS makes me smile at how good it is, while Windows makes me furious sometimes. Just, yelling at the screen, stopping my work, going online and venting my frustrations on a forum somewhere. Microsoft is awful.