Adobe Illustrator is a vector-based drawing program developed and marketed by Adobe Systems.
Illustrator was a reliable, capable product, however, and its relatively low learning curve let users quickly appreciate that the new paradigm was not only better, but finally solved the problem of imprecision from existing programs like MacDraw. It also provided a tool for people who could neither afford nor learn high-end (and perhaps overkill) software such as AutoCAD. Illustrator successfully filled a niche between painting and CAD programs.
Illustrator's power and simplicity derive from the choice of Bézier curves as the primary document element. A degenerate curve provides a line, and circles and arcs (trigonometric shapes) can be emulated closely enough. In a novel twist, Adobe also made Illustrator documents true PostScript files -- if one wanted to print them, one could send them directly to a PostScript printer instead of printing them from Illustrator. Since PostScript is a readable text format, third-party developers also found it easy to write programs that generated Illustrator documents.
Adobe was willing to take risks with Illustrator's user interface. Instead of following Apple's UI guidelines to the letter or imitating other popular Macintosh programs, they made it possible to switch between the various navigation tools (i.e, Zoom and Pan) using various keyboard key combinations. Probably from Adobe's past experience in-house, it knew what it was doing, and the majority of users vindicated the design as "slick." Unfortunately, Apple later chose one of the key combinations (Command-Space) as the keyboard layout changer, and Windows treated another (the Alt key) as a system key.
With true ports of the Macintosh versions to Windows starting with version 7 in 1997, designers could finally standardize on Illustrator. Corel's other problems notwithstanding (such as competing against Microsoft with WordPerfect), they relegated CorelDraw to the consumer market, as something non-professionals might use. Corel did port CorelDraw 6.0 to the Macintosh in late 1996, but it was received as too little, too late. Aldus ported FreeHand to Windows but it was not the equal of Illustrator. Adobe bought Aldus in 1994 for PageMaker, and as part of the transaction it sold FreeHand to Macromedia.
With the rise of the Internet, Illustrator was enhanced to support Web publishing, rasterization previewing, PDF, and SVG.
| Version | Platforms | Release date | Code name |
| 1.0 | Mac OS | January 1987 | |
| 1.1 | Mac OS | March 1987 | Inca |
| 2.0 | Windows | January 1989 | Pinnacle |
| 88 | Mac OS | March 1988 | Picasso |
| 3 | Mac OS, NeXT, other Unixes | October 1990 | Desert Moose |
| 3.5 | Silicon Graphics | 1991 | |
| 4 | Windows | May 1992 | Kangaroose |
| 3.5 | Solaris | 1993 | |
| 5 | Mac OS | June 1993 | Saturn |
| 5.5 | Mac OS, Solaris http://www.sunmanagers.org/archives/1999/0973.html | June 1994 | Janus |
| 4.1 | Windows | 1995 | |
| 6 | Mac OS | February 1996 | Popeye |
| 7 | Mac/Windows | May 1997 | Simba |
| 8 | Mac/Windows | September 1998 | Elvis |
| 9 | Mac/Windows | June 2000 | Matisse |
| 10 | Mac/Windows | November 2001 | Paloma |
| CS (11) | Mac/Windows | October 2003 | Pangaea/Sprinkles |
| CS2 (12) | Mac/Windows | April 27, 2005 | Zodiac |
| CS3 (13) | Mac/Windows | expected Q2 2007 | Jason |
Adobe software | Adobe Creative Suite | IRIX software | Mac OS software | Windows software | Vector graphics editors | Raster to vector conversion software
Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator | Adobe Illustrator
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Adobe Illustrator".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world