For more information about creating and editing rollovers, see Creating and editing rollovers. For example, in a sliced image named "banner", the slice in the first row and the first column is called "banner_r1c1".Īn image slice can also be a rollover. Slices that are not named are automatically given names based on their row and column location in the slice grid. The default settings are applied to any slices that are not given specific properties. Individual slices can also be exported to different file formats and optimized separately. Once you have sliced an image, you can specify a filename. You also can hide the slice grid and overlay. You can still access other features while you work on a sliced image. The slice grid creates an overlay in the image window. You can also import or export slice grids. You can create the slice grid automatically based on the placement of objects in an image, or create equal slices based on the number of columns and rows you specify. To slice an image, you must first create a slice grid by placing horizontal and vertical slice lines on the image. For more information about rollovers, see Creating and editing rollovers. If you want to create clickable areas in other shapes, you can use rollovers instead. The resulting files, or slices, can be for viewing only or can be clickable (with hyperlinks). Image slicing lets you load a large image on a webpage one piece at a time by cutting it into several smaller files. To display or hide the slice overlay and grid
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