Okay,
Here's my technical answer: It's a
PITA! (Pain in the ass)
Convert just about anything to a curve and you begin your problems. Add a contour or an outline and the problem gets bigger. Three outlines and a weld and the instability factor kicks in and whoosh . . . everything you've done since your last save is gone. It's at that point where I begin to curse Corel, kick and spit.
So what do you do? Well here we go (in no particular order):
Auto-backup: Set Auto-backup to a reasonable number. Corel's default is 20 minutes, I like mine every 9 minutes. To do this, you have to be in an open document, click “ctrl+j”, expand the "Workspace" option and click "Save". Here you can change the Auto-backup interval. You can also set a specific folder to save your Auto-backups to and I always make sure the "Make backup on save" box is checked. This will save you a lot of headaches.
Undo Method: To fix the ghostly figures you have to do a little finagling and back tracking. Here is where the undo button becomes your new best friend.
A. As soon as you have the problem, click the undo button! The object(s) in question should still be selected.
B. Click “ctrl+c” (copy clip). This places a copy of the selected items in/on your volatile memory (clipboard).
C. Click the redo button . . . back where we started except now we have an original copy in the back of the computer’s volatile memory to work with (wink).
D. Click “ctrl+p” (paste) and paste the original into place so you can edit the resulting image with it.
Like I said, it’s a PITA but this the easiest way I’ve found around it. Save frequently, this mixes up the active memory a little and seems to help some.
Text conversions: Edit one letter at a time, convert to curves and then weld, the only factor that I can see repeated in text conversion problems is a narrow stroke width.
Shape conversions: Create another shape that encapsulates the entire object, trim the smaller object from the larger object then break apart the new object (“ctrl+k”), remove the larger object and work with the components of the “new” smaller object.
If you’re experiencing
memory problems, and the
program slows or shuts down on you a lot, try allocating more memory to it. Click “ctrl+j”, expand the memory option and adjust the “Available RAM.” This will take a little experimentation and will depend on how many programs you use at once and how many applications you have running in the background. I have mine set at 35% (35% of 256Mb = 89Mb, that’s plenty) and I’m okay.
Whew, that’s a lot of stuff to digest but it is a huge problem with Corel as far as I’m concerned. Hope they get this right on the next go-round.