
ACDSee Pro 6 User Guide
Save a Copy: Save a copy of your edited image with a new name or format, and continue to work on the original
file.
Save a Copy is useful for making multiple versions of an image while continuing to work from the original file instead of a
new processed copy. For example, if you take a RAW image and save a copy of it as a JPG, instead of switching to this lossy
JPG image, you remain on the RAW file with the settings still intact.
Save is not available for RAW file formats because you cannot directly save changes to a RAW file.
To discard changes to the image and return to the mode you were in previously:
Click Cancel or use the keyboard shortcut ESC.
For more information on how different file formats are saved depending on their processed state, see How ACDSee Pro
saves changes to images. To learn how images are saved in Develop, see Saving images in Develop.
How ACDSee Pro Saves Changes to Images
How images are saved is different between non-encodable (e.g. RAW) and encodable (e.g. JPEG) images. The table below outlines
the differences in how changes to your image are saved by ACDSee. The purpose of saving files in its original, developed, and edited
states is to allow you to revert back to a setting if you decide to discard your changes at a later time.
If you archive your images, ensure that you back up subfolders to preserve the original image files.
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