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Inspiring
February 17, 2010
Question

why is illustrator better than corel? [locked]

  • February 17, 2010
  • 15 replies
  • 78302 views

hello forumers.

im an illustrator freak, but my annoying boss wants me to learn corel ;-( ,i need some facts why illustrator is better than corel so i can shove his face in it if possible.

VIVA illi

thank you very much.

[This discussion is from Feb 17, 2010 9:58 AM and is more than eight years old. It is now locked. Please start a new thread, as both products have changed.]

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15 replies

New Participant
August 19, 2014

I have used both CorelDraw and Illustrator since the earliest versions and am using the current versions.  I won't repeat the great write-ups (right-ups?) earlier in this conversation that definitively and correctly illustrate the differences.  As an industrial designer that designs point of purchase displays, CorelDraw wins hands down.

Aside from those attributes listed above, I have two reasons for making this blog entry: one practical - CorelDraw is terribly faster for my work, and one altruistic - I dislike most aspects of Adobe from their culture to their practices relating to their software that doesn't always work anyway.  Illustrator sells because it's the best thing that will work on a Mac. Period. 

Details: My work entails creating a presentation drawing to sell the job and then communicate with the maker-types to create a prototype.  Follow-up drawings are a dream where in Illustrator it is a chore.  Finally, contract drawings are created which amount to engineering drawings.  I used to do this in an Autodesk CAD program but 'Draw can do it faster and cheaper.  Illustrator can almost do it, and it is like pulling teeth.  Most graphic artists that work with me do not agree with all my views.  But in almost 30 years of using computer design programs as a free lance CorelDraw has always been a clear choice for me.

Participating Frequently
May 18, 2014

Lol, and you expect cons on a Adobe forum?:))

And I am a Corel freak , arround 15 years, familiar with illustrator also. If we talk about vectors then Corel is by far the best, it is straight and clean on what you have to do, with what you need to do, I'm just roaring when I must finish something in illustrator, their team it's so mind twisted about tools and ergonomics, every time I want to scream and beat somebody:)). I can assure you that you finish twice as fast in Corel, illustrator is more about creativity not for productivity, also you can paste directly in photoshop as smart object witch is the best feature of all times:), anyway, you must play with what you know better.

Inspiring
July 2, 2014

You can always cherry pick whatever perceived advantage that one piece of software has over another.  The fact is, every single piece of software has something that it does better than another.  Even Illustrator is not best at everything.  But frankly, I think the comments from MyCoalescense above are just incredibly wrong.

I don't know if Adobe is doing enough, but I feel extremely strongly that Corel is not.  How do we explain the disaster that is the undeveloped, forgotten, abandoned since the late 90's, eternally, extremely buggy Photo-Paint?  That's the only other "major" program in Corel's idea of a "suite".  It's a joke.  How does Photo-Paint compare to.  Photoshop.  I don't think they both belong in the same sentence or even in the same thread.  The difference is greater than night and day in every conceivable way.  Quality, scope, modernization, you name it.  Photo-Paint's only use is to help to call CorelDraw a suite.  If you take that dinosaur out of the box, is it still a suite?  With just the other throwaway items in the box?  Antique Font Navigator?  Crummy Corel Connect.  And a web editor that mostly Corel fans say don't bother to install?  Is that a suite?

I'm not here to really defend Adobe.  I detest the notion of renting their products forever, but I can't deny the fact that they are absolutely making the highest quality product ever.  And I appreciate their extreme reliability and quality.

New Participant
July 2, 2014

Don't know why I'm wading into this old thread, but...

I receive somewhere between 10 and 20 customer files per day. The overwhelming majority of them were produced using some version of Adobe software. Unless you want to live on an island, you use Adobe. I don't care if its the "best" or not. The fact is it has become the defacto standard.

So, if all you are doing is personal, and you will never be communicating with anyone else, pick whatever you want. Makes no difference. But if you are going to be communicating your work (ie, sending comps to your web programmer or sending PDF's to your commercial printer or whatever) you can be confident that if you send them files created with Adobe stuff, they'll be able to work with it. Send them something else and you take your chances.

JETalmage
Inspiring
February 17, 2010
Do not, I repeat do not, ask James or Scott or Hans.


Indeed.

Only ask Jacob, who is still using a four-version out-of-date copy of Illustrator and who tries to personify it as a female idol.

If the comparison is to be "fair" (which it clearly will not be, at least from your perspective), it should compare Corel Draw X4 to Illustrator CS3 or CS4. Release dates being what they were, X4 would more legitimately be considered Draw's answer to CS3; since it long predates CS4.

Talking about earlier versions of either program is not very meaningful, except in the sense of history of development. When I compare the release histories of Draw, FreeHand, Canvas, and Illustrator, Illustrator comes in an often-embarrassing last in terms of features long taken-for-granted in other programs.

im an illustrator freak,but my annoying boss wants me to learn corel...i need some facts [that] I can shove his face..

Shove in your boss's face? For presenting you an opportunity to escape fearful dependency upon a single software?

i need the pros and cons...to outline to him why illustrator is better...


Why don't you simply welcome this opportunity to actually know something about that which you claim a completely bogus "preference"?

Were you at all interested in gaining input that would help you help your boss reach a rational and objective decision, you would at least describe something about the kind of work your boss pays you to do. What kind of business employs you? Is the Macintosh platform even relevant to your boss's business market? How large a workgroup is affected by the software choice? What kind of artwork does that workgroup produce? How is it delivered? What are its initial content sources? Who are the end-users of the artwork? In how many different ways is it delivered, and in what formats?

Yet here you are, soliciting predisposed "why Illustrator is 'better' than Draw" advice from a handful of users who, so far, admit themselves having either no, or practically no, experience with Draw! If that's not blind-leading-the-blind, I don't know what is.

You are by admission predisposed toward Illustrator, even though you are not at all equipped to say why. Reason is pointless with so irrational a mindset. Since no one responding yet seems to actually know anything about Draw, I will instead offer some ammunition I hope your boss uses to see if you are even objective enough to consider it.

The following is a just-off-the-top list. Should you actually try to counter it, you should be prepared for more:

General:

Lower cost, both initially and in upgrades

Better support for non-current versions

Faster performance

Better support for several vertical-market industries (signage, embroidery, engineering-related)

More robust CAD and more business-centric import/export formats

Better multiple page implementation

Better-organized interface

Highly-customizable workspace

Features:

User-defined drawing scales

Reliable snaps

Dimension tools

Callout tools

Connector lines

Flowchart Tools

No-nonsense, 2D vector face extrusion

Live shape primitives

Smart Drawing tools (freehand shape recognition)

Virtual Segment tool

Ability to properly cut/crop vector and raster content

Contour tool (multiple parallels)

Export selection only

Barcodes

Print Merge

Bundle for Output Bureau

Scan directly into Draw

Trim (not merely mask) vector artwork to any path

Fit Text To Path

Text stats

Export artwork as Type 1 font.

Lens Fills (live details)

Live Perspective

Object Data (spreadsheet-formatted database of user-defined object data fields)

Fillet / Chamfer / Scallop

User-defined Arrowheads

Shared Features Better Implemented in Draw:

Mesh Grads

Dynamic Guides (with increment snaps)

Independent control over Snaps for Guides, Grid, Objects, Dynamic Grids

Property Bar (far more sensible and useable than AI's poorly-designed and buggy Control Panel)

Status Bar with context-sensitive instructions

Elastic Mode (vs. AI's Reshape tool)

Add/remove/line/curve/cusp/symmetrical curve commands properly implemented for all nodes (points) in a selected path

Logarithmic and Symmetrical spirals

Macro Recording (vs. AI Actions)

Envelopes (retract envelope handles without wrecking artwork)

Old-Saw Arguements Based on Overstatement, if not Myths:

Adobe's cross-app "integration" is more hype than substantive advantage.

Illustrator's text handing is worst among Adobe apps and worst-of-class among its direct competitors.

Draw opens and creates PDFs just fine.

Claims of AI superiority regarding importing of raster images is practically immaterial. In fact, Corel Draw's interaction with Corel PhotoPaint is at least as "smooth and seamless" as AI/PS, if not more so.

Using vector artwork created in Draw (or any other mainstream Bezier drawing program) in page-layout programs is no more difficult than using AI. This stuff has been being done for decades.

Again, this is just a beginning. You do yourself a huge disservice by declaring (let alone attempting to defend) a "preference" to the only choice with which you have experience (and evidently only beginning experience at that). That's true regardless of which program you claim to "favor." How can one, with any trace of intellectual honesty, claim to have a "favorite" of anything--when one has no exposure to any of the considered alternatives?

Since you already have Illustrator, you should absolutely welcome your Boss's willingness to provide you a current copy of Corel Draw. Here's an opportunity for you--at no personal cost--to actually learn something about another program; to potentially have some clue as to what you're talking about when you claim to "prefer" one over the other; to benefit from knowing more than one particular tool, and to overcome the fear of learning your way around more than one offering among similar programs. For all you know, you may be arguing against the program you would actually end up preferring.

I could also build a bullet list of better-than-Draw AI features. It would not be as long as its opposite. Nor would the AI-favoring listings be as broadly practical.

Fact is, anyone can build a bullet list to favor any of them. (Just look at the sides of the boxes, or each vendor's self-serving "competitive comparisons" on their respective websites.) Fact is, all of them are really rather mediocre; mostly 20+ years-old technology.

You really should have no axe to grind in this, unless you can state something specific to your work that strongly favors the relatively few functional advantages of AI.

JET

RotoRouter
Known Participant
February 17, 2010

James, how come we don't see you at the CD forums?

http://coreldraw.com/forums/246.aspx

I know CD users would love your indepth explanations on the machinations of CD.

Regards,

Chris

JETalmage
Inspiring
February 17, 2010

I often lurk in the newsgroup.

JET

Jacob Bugge
Community Expert
February 17, 2010

inquestflash,

Do not, I repeat do not, ask James or Scott or Hans.

Inspiring
February 17, 2010

hello jacob

who are they? :-/

New Participant
February 17, 2010

Hello inquestflash,

I have a little experience with illustrator and I use it for my work. I cannot tell you anything about CorelDraw, because I do not use it.

However, I can give you my honest opinion of Adobe Illustrator.

Illustrator have great tools and I love that you can place photoshop files, modify the photoshop file and will update when you go back to Illustrator file. As a graphic designer I think this is very useful (InDesign and Quark are limited on this), and I love the pen tool.

The problem with Illustrator is that you DO NOT GET UPDATES. So whatever bugs comes with the version is what you have to work with. Adobe does not care to fix anything.

CS4 version have critical bugs that seriously will affect your professional work:

Font Bug: Even if you have used a font with old versions of illustrator, if the CS4 version considered as a corrupted font, the program can crash, refuse to open file, etc.

Memory Bug: This bug was reported few week after the program came out (but like I said before: NO UPDATES) and you can be doing something simple and the program will tell you "Not Enough Memory"

Color Bug: As a graphic designer, I can tell you that this is a really big issue (Adobe refuse to fix). The CS4 color system is no accurate. And that can cost a lot of money depending how big is the job.

Text Box Bug: Justifying the text using the Area Type tool is bad. This bug came with the CS versions and Adobe has not fix it.

Crop Tool Bug: A lot of user have complaint about this tool becoming useless in CS4. And no Updates!

PDF Bug, Grid Bug, etc., etc., etc., etc., etc., etc.,

But you will hear a lot of excuse why the program is not working properly, but at the end of name calling, insults, and excuses, no one here can tell you where is the CS4 update, how to fix these Critical CS4 Bugs. Instead Adobe will sell you the new version CS5 with new and old bugs that wont care to fix.

Feel free to explore all this links of bugs, and you will see that non of them have an answer on how to fix it (just excuses):

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/570723?tstart=0

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/513558?tstart=0

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2358318#2358318

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/568439?tstart=0

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/432976?tstart=990

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/488095?tstart=660

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/477259?tstart=960

http://forums.adobe.com/thread/458237?tstart=0

http://forums.adobe.com/message/1256865#1256865

http://forums.adobe.com/message/1255002#1255002

http://forums.adobe.com/message/1253297#1253297

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2088297#2088297

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2014275#2014275

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2317200#2317200

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2180704#2180704

http://forums.adobe.com/message/2180704#2180704

To make it simple, just ask when was the last time Adobe Illustrator provided an update?

I am thinking of buying Xara Xtreme (http://site.xara.com/gallery/) which provides updates, to stop using illustrator. The bad news is that this program is only for PC.

But if you really want to make research on Adobe Illustrator visit other user forums away from Adobe Forum. The users are a lot more vocal about Adobe Illustrator.


what about freehand as compare to illustrator i thing freehand was outstanding application no doubt is there was any color issue like u said in illustrator its to danger

Known Participant
February 17, 2010

Corel had its hayday back in the mid-late 90's. I used CorelDraw 5 when I

was starting to learn vector illustration and continued using it

exclusively through version 8, but I reached a point where I grew out of

it and moved on to Illustrator.

It has been a long time since I've used anything from Corel so I probably

couldn't fairly assess their strengths and weaknesses nowadays. Last time

I even saw their interface, it was CorelDraw 10. It seemed just "okay" to

me, but I still preferred Illustrator.

I don't think your boss should be the one to decide which software is best

for you if he is not having to use it himself everyday. That would be like

me going to the mechanic and telling him which tools he had to use to

repair my vehicle.

-JM

Inspiring
February 17, 2010

hello junk.

your absolute right about what program im  comfortable  with,but i need the pros and cons of the programs. to outline to him why illustrator is better.