Adobe Illustrator vs Inkscape.
Posted: Wed Sep 02, 2009 11:38 pm
Inkscape is better.
I'm a big Adobe Illustrator user and have made more money using it than any other skill I poses. So when I say Inkscape is better, I mean it's a big deal to me. Now Correl Draw is a program I only used for a week and I would say that's the best vertex art program on the planet. But I don't need it if I can do the same jobs on cheaper software.
Adobe Illustrator vs Inkscape.
Price:
Adobe Illusrator CS4: $599
Inkscape 0.46: Free
Inkscape features compared with Illusrator:
[Inkscape pro]There are tools in Inkscape that I don't know how I got along with out. Such as offsetting a shape smaller than its clone. If CS4 has it, then it's a new feature.
Much cleaner UI. Much better Path tools such as “simplify” that tries to lower your vertex count with out changing the shape of your object.
UI for building objects and coloring them makes a lot more scene to me.
Very tiny footprint compared to Illustrator.
Windows, Mac, and Linux (BIG plus: it runs on Linux distros)
[Inkscape con]Inkscape has a weird gradient system that's not very intuitive. After a bit of practice I got it to work but I prefer Illustrator's gradient system.
(THIS IS INCORRECT INFORMATION. IGNORE ALL IN RED)Selecting objects is a pain. I like to have hundreds of objects per page. But there seems to be no good way of organizing these in the layers menu. In fact objects aren't even listed in the layers menu. This will make some projects hard to do unless I plan around this problem, but making sections in different areas of the page. --click xml tree on main toolbar for object list.
It cashes a bit more than Illustrator. If you don't crash Illustrator you're not working hard enough, so this really isn't a big change.
No gradient mesh tool. This might be a deal breaker for some people.
No safety: It will let you run out of memory with no warning. And the esc key won't save you like it will in Illusrator.
Conclusion:
Aside from working with flash you can pretty much do anything in Inkscape that you could do in Illusrator. And the stuff you can't do the open source community has produced alternatives that work with flash and other features.
Some stuff I've done already:
![Image](http://isaacg.net/forums/ODFLOGO02.png)
![Image](http://isaacg.net/forums/ODFLOGO04.png)
I'm a big Adobe Illustrator user and have made more money using it than any other skill I poses. So when I say Inkscape is better, I mean it's a big deal to me. Now Correl Draw is a program I only used for a week and I would say that's the best vertex art program on the planet. But I don't need it if I can do the same jobs on cheaper software.
Adobe Illustrator vs Inkscape.
Price:
Adobe Illusrator CS4: $599
Inkscape 0.46: Free
Inkscape features compared with Illusrator:
[Inkscape pro]There are tools in Inkscape that I don't know how I got along with out. Such as offsetting a shape smaller than its clone. If CS4 has it, then it's a new feature.
Much cleaner UI. Much better Path tools such as “simplify” that tries to lower your vertex count with out changing the shape of your object.
UI for building objects and coloring them makes a lot more scene to me.
Very tiny footprint compared to Illustrator.
Windows, Mac, and Linux (BIG plus: it runs on Linux distros)
[Inkscape con]Inkscape has a weird gradient system that's not very intuitive. After a bit of practice I got it to work but I prefer Illustrator's gradient system.
(THIS IS INCORRECT INFORMATION. IGNORE ALL IN RED)Selecting objects is a pain. I like to have hundreds of objects per page. But there seems to be no good way of organizing these in the layers menu. In fact objects aren't even listed in the layers menu. This will make some projects hard to do unless I plan around this problem, but making sections in different areas of the page. --click xml tree on main toolbar for object list.
It cashes a bit more than Illustrator. If you don't crash Illustrator you're not working hard enough, so this really isn't a big change.
No gradient mesh tool. This might be a deal breaker for some people.
No safety: It will let you run out of memory with no warning. And the esc key won't save you like it will in Illusrator.
Conclusion:
Aside from working with flash you can pretty much do anything in Inkscape that you could do in Illusrator. And the stuff you can't do the open source community has produced alternatives that work with flash and other features.
Some stuff I've done already:
![Image](http://isaacg.net/forums/ODFLOGO02.png)
![Image](http://isaacg.net/forums/ODFLOGO04.png)