Sprite Editor Window does not have a scroll bar, and as a result, does not display the Release Button at the bottom of the window for lower-end PCs.
I am running Cartoon Animator 5 on an HP Laptop with Windows 11 (version 10.0.26100 Build 26100)- it has a maximum screen resolution of 1366x768 pixels. Due to that screen resolution, the CTA5 windows turn out to be quite large on my screen. Almost every feature of Cartoon Animator 5 seems to work quite well for me. It is a great app! But there is one problem area that seems to be a problematic bug in my environment. Whenever I enter the Sprite Editor and all of the available sprites are displayed for a character's body part, I believe (according to tutorials) that there is supposed to be a Release button at the bottom of the Sprite Editor window. However, that Release button is not displayed for me- it is probably below the bottom of my screen. Unfortunately, I cannot move the window upwards to see the Release Button, because there is no portion of the window that allows me to grab the window with my mouse pointer and pull it upwards. It also will not permit me to size the window to a smaller size to permit me to see the Release Button- the window seems to be as small as it is permitted to be. In order for me to see that Release Button, I believe that I would likely have to scroll down to it. But there is no vertical scroll bar added into the Sprite Editor window to permit me to scroll downwards. As a result of these constraints, whenever I add a keyframe to manually change the sprite for a mouth, my auto-generated visemes for lip-synching on that mouth are disabled and lip movements for phonemes on that mouth no longer occur after that particular keyframe where I inserted the manual mouth sprite change. Without the ability to hit that Release Button, I cannot do manual lip adjustments (for smiles and such) and then later have voice-activated visemes be activated. It has become very limiting. Does it seem feasible to add a vertical scroll bar to the Sprite Editor window? It would make your product more useable in a larger array of Windows PCs- even lower-end PCs. This could increase the size of your addressable market by permitting users with lower-end PCs to buy and learn and utilize your stellar product. Thanks for your consideration.