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"Share" button covering "accept" button

Participant ,
Oct 11, 2022 Oct 11, 2022

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When applying transformations, editing text, and other actions, the "share" button is covering "accept" button (checkmark) to commit the changes. I can still accept changes (most times) by pressing the enter key on the numpad (except on laptop, where this isn't an option). Please don't tell me to reset my preferences, update, or reinstall, I've already tried that!

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Adobe
Community Expert ,
Oct 11, 2022 Oct 11, 2022

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@Fine Art P 

 

You didn't share a screen shot or give monitor details, so I'm guessing. One recent user post the same issue and it turned out he had a small monitor. If you have a large monitor with PS resized to take up half the screen, it's the same thing. The solution that worked for him was to select to use the Narrow Options Bar in Preferences > Interface (Photoshop menu). You will see icons instead of words, but everything will be there.
https://photoshoptrainingchannel.com/tips/enable-narrow-options-bar-small-display/

 

Let us know if this works (or not).

 

Jane

 

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Participant ,
Oct 04, 2023 Oct 04, 2023

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I have three monitors, which are HD/4K. My toolbars are arranged on their own screen, floating. The options toolbar takes up about 60% of the horizontal width of the tool screen. Afaik, the options toolbar is not one that can be resized. I still experience this problem. My usual solution is to switch tools when I'm ready to accept transformations, crop, etc. 

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Participant ,
Aug 05, 2024 Aug 05, 2024

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As an update, the options toolbar resizes itself when I drag it to a new screen, which is when it becomes too small for its contents. As long as you just work on 1 screen, you won't have this problem.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 05, 2024 Aug 05, 2024

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Just adding some comments and ideas…

 

It probably isn’t just on “small” displays, but also on larger displays where the UI scaling factor is increased significantly beyond 100%. That setting is separate from the display resolution (pixel dimensions). The problem might be more likely to happen on displays set to pixel dimensions closer to the minimum in the system requirements, because when the UI scaling factor is increased, the UI would get pushed over the edge on those displays first.

 

Some of you might realize this already, but the options bar does resize if it’s docked to the application frame. The problems with it being too short and not resizable, and settings being crammed together or overlapping, seem to happen mostly when the options bar is floating instead of docked. I don’t know if that is “as designed” but it seems like they might mostly be testing the app with docked panels and maybe aren’t paying enough attention to scenarios where the options bar is undocked, because these problems shouldn’t be happening.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 11, 2022 Oct 11, 2022

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On your Mac the return key does the same thing as enter.

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Community Expert ,
Oct 11, 2022 Oct 11, 2022

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@Fine Art P 

I just tested on both my Windows laptop and Mac laptop, neither of which has an extended keyboard containing the extra "Enter".

 

Command + Return will accept the text and exit text mode. If Windows users read this later, the shortcut is Control + Enter.

 

 


@Jeff Arola wrote:

On your Mac the return key does the same thing as enter.


 

Not always, Jeff, but sometimes. 🙂

 

On a Mac, "Return" is a carriage return (as it is called on a typewriter), and will start a new line. "Enter" is on the numeric keypad and has been known as the Action key, sort of an "Okay" button. Return and Enter keys have two different ASCII codes (36 and 76).

 

Several Adobe apps assign the two keys to different functions on both Mac and Windows. One example is: Return/Alphabetic Enter starts a new paragraph in InDesign while Enter/Numeric Enter is the shortcut for a column break.

 

Jane

 

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