Eh? None of those things sound like Illustrator's standard behaviour! The stroke and fill options should serve all the necessary purposes. I have to say that -- in fifteen years of using Illustrator -- I've never used the Paint Bucket tool for anything.
The whole point of Illustrator is that it's vector rather than bitmap based, so nothing should ever be jaggy. Can you help me out? If you follow through the steps I've described upthread, where does it all start to go a bit Pete?
Thanks for that Jim - and might I say what a famtastic and helpful thread you've got going here!
I need to sit down and have a really good fiddle with Illustrator soon, as I'm pretty new to using it.
I think the problems I'm having come down to not having worked out my working process properly. I keep flitting about from Photoshop into Illustrator, and sometimes I'm dragging things into Photoshop from SketchUp... it sometimes gets very confusing.
If I recall correctly, the problem withthe paint bucket tool and the jagged edges is actually occurring in Photoshop, and not illustrator. I've read up on the basics of tidying up the line art and trapping, which goes some way to helping me understand where I'm going wrong. (too complex to go into, but trust me, it helped!)