![]() ![]() We might miss each other, but the messages will stay here. Please tell us what the other program is, and that will be a good place to start.ĭon't worry. If you can't make the new layers or move the content to the new layers, for some reason, there still might be some other things you can do, while the file is still in Inkscape. But someone here might have used it, and could try to help. Well, even knowing what the program is, it's likely that I've never used it. But without knowing what the other program is, I can only guess. Theoretically, it seems like you might be able to create new layers in that other program, and move the content into the new layer. That might be a good sign though, if you can still select the content of the layers individually. So I think that's what you're seeing, when you say you can still move the layers around, but they aren't in the list of layers in the other program. ![]() ![]() (SVG standards are the rules, or codes, that define SVG images.) Inkscape layers are actually special Groups. If I recall correctly, the reason Inkscape doesn't have traditional layers, is because there's not an SVG standard for it. I guess when we consider that Inkscape doesn't have real layers, it's not surprising that there's a problem importing layers into other programs. So for that reason, I think you might have imported the SVG into another program. They would be empty, but they would still be there. However, the layers that you named would still be there. If we were talking about Inkscape, there are a couple of things that can cause the contents of more than one layer to be combined into 1 layer. What program did you import into? Or do you mean that you saved, and just opened it again in Inkscape, later? ![]()
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