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One of the first things you will probably want to do with Starry Night is to look around the sky. In your backyard this is simple enough to do,and using Starry Night is almost as easy. |
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Use the Hand (or Grabber) tool to grab the sky and, holding down your mouse button, drag the view left or right, up or down, any which way you want. It's that simple! It is also possible to use the scroll bars to change the direction in which you are looking. By scrolling down to the bottom of the vertical scroll bar, you are looking straight down. By scrolling to the top, you're looking straight up. The horizontal scroll bar controls the direction in which you view, through all 360° of the compass.
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The easiest and most convenient way to change your field of view is to use the Zoom buttons (they have the near mountains / far mountains icons on them), located on the Tool Palette. Note that your current field of view is displayed just beneath the buttons. The button on the left zooms the view out to a larger field of view, the middle one zooms in for a more magnified view, and a third button on the right returns the field of view to normal, or about 100°. Try using these buttons to get a hang of zooming in and out.
It is important to remember that when you zoom in on objects, you are not in fact changing your location. It is, instead, akin to looking through a more and more powerful telescope, while staying with your feet firmly planted in one place. Unless you've locked onto an object, Starry Night will display the effects of Earth's rotation, so at a high zoom setting, stars and planets will "rotate out" of the window's view. We will discuss how to lock onto an object in the Planet Palette chapter. Using the Magnification tool |
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Another way of changing your field of view is to use the Magnify tool (the little magnifying glass). Click on the tool to activate it, then click anywhere in the window to zoom in that direction. To magnify a specific area of the sky, hold down the mouse button and drag to encompass the area you wish magnified. Holding down the Ctrl key (Windows) or the Option key (Macintosh) while using the Magnification tool will zoom you back out. Use the normal field of view button to quickly return to the standard view.
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