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Saving Your Preferences
You can save most preferences using the Save button on the preferences panel, which launches the exporter "File/Export/Plain Text/Preferences as script". It produces a
.szl file that you can run later on the same machine, or on a different machine to transfer your preferences there. Use Script/Run Script and select the exported file to run it.
This exporter has a variety of options, and can produce an explanatory listing as well (which produces a .txt file that is then opened).
Important : Preferences as script does not export or reset all preferences, only those appearing on the left side of the preferences panel. Delete the preferences file or Edit/Reset Preferences for the most complete reset. Some exported preferences may be inappropriate for a target machine with a different operating system, screen resolution, or file system layout. You should look at the exported settings to verify their suitability.
SynthEyes stores some information in separate files, not in the preferences, such as keybd14.ini (key mapping), layout14.ini (viewport layouts), safe14.ini (safe areas),
shotpreset.txt, prepsetprefs.prp, camtool14.xml, pertool14.xml, usertoken.dat, and winlayout14.xml. There are standard system versions of these files in the SynthEyes install; if you have changed the listed items, a custom copy of the entire file is stored in your user area (not a list of changes, for example).
As you save the preferences, you are given the option to include those files in the created script, so that you can carry only the single .szl file to the new system in order to recreate those files. Only user-customized versions of the files will be saved; the system versions are never transferred.
When you run the exported script, you'll have the option to allow or deny each type of information to be changed, and each individual file to be overwritten or not.
If you've customized these additional files, you may want to Save the preferences and reset the associated files from time to time to ensure you are picking up the latest capabilities in new SynthEyes versions, so that you don't have orphaned viewport configuration file, especially.
Tip : Use the Listing button on the Edit/Edit Keyboard Map panel to see what keyboard mappings you've changed versus the standard factory settings. If you haven't changed anything, you can skip including them in the script.
If you want to be especially tricky, you can export different sets of preferences to different files within your user scripts area, edit the first line to give them somewhat different names, then switch between different sets of preferences for different tasks.
This is almost certainly overkill, however.
©2024 Boris FX, Inc. — UNOFFICIAL — Converted from original PDF.