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Paint.net 4.2 is out with a huge list of changes

Paint.net 4.2 is out with a huge list of changes

The developer of Paint.net released a new version of the image editor for Microsoft's Windows operating system on July 13, 2019.

Paint.net 4.2 is an update for the desktop version and Microsoft Store version of the image editor. The new version is already available for download on the official project website. Updates of the Store version and installed versions may take up to a week if automatic updates are enabled.

Desktop users may run a manual check for updates to download the new version immediately; this is done with a click on the Settings icon, and selecting Updates > Check now in the Settings window.

To put the 4.2 release into perspective. Paint.net 4.0 was released in 2014, Paint.net 4.1 in 2018. The developer of Paint.net releases updates regularly but major updates like Paint.net 4.2 are rare.

One of the major new features of Paint.net 4.2 is support for the HEIC file format. Support is not available on all supported versions of Windows, however. HEIC support is only available on devices running Windows 10 version 1809 or newer, and only if the HEVC Video Extensions application is installed.

The Paint.net developer mentions the paid version for $0.99 only but there is also a free version available that users may want to give a try. Microsoft included the codec initially in Windows 10 but moved it to the Store when it released the Creators Update for Windows 10.

A quick test on a Windows 10 version 1809 confirmed that the free version is enough to display .heic images in the image editor.

The format is used as the default format on Apple iPhone devices and also supported on some devices running newer versions of Android.

Core file types, including BMP, GIF, PNG, JPEG, and TIFF -- have been upgraded internally. The developer built them on top of the Windows Image Component instead of GDI+ which also introduced new functionality such as support for saving 32-bit BMP images with alpha transparency, support for larger JPEG, TIFF, and PNG sizes, or saving TIFF images at 25-bit and 8 color depths.

Paint.net did not really handle very large images, those starting at 32kx32k pixels, well performance-wise. Users who had to edit these large images noticed that performance would drop of significantly  and that it could take anywhere from several seconds to a minute before the application responded again.

Other changes in Paint.net 4.2

You find the full list of changes published on the Paint.net Blog.

Now You: Which image editor, if any, do you use?

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