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Digikam applying recursive tag
Digikam applying recursive tag




  1. #DIGIKAM APPLYING RECURSIVE TAG FULL#
  2. #DIGIKAM APPLYING RECURSIVE TAG WINDOWS#

Most of the video and audio stuff was cobbled together, and I need to revisit it. Making the media viewer's elements float above the image on mouse-move is high on my to-do list. Perhaps I need to write a scripting logic for the program first, so people can do these mass edits a bit easier? Allowing more complicated hotkeys could also use this scripting/macro language, and would be the easiest of the three things to do. Perhaps this is just an powerful formalisation of the drag and drop idea above. THIS IS WHAT THEY WILL LOOK LIKE AFTERWARDS. RIGHT: AFTER RUNNING THE SEARCH, THESE FILES MATCHED. Maybe split it into two halves, like LEFT: IF FILE MATCHES THESE PROPERTIES, MIDDLE: DO THESE THINGS. I haven't thought about what the dialog would look like for such a complicated and powerful tool, though. Internal tag conversion is something that has been on my radar for a while– particularly for large but finicky jobs like adjusting page:n to page:n+1 for two hundred files.

digikam applying recursive tag

I want to add thumbnail dragging and dropping in future, so this could be a great extension of that code. It could also do file uploading/exporting and other such duties.

#DIGIKAM APPLYING RECURSIVE TAG WINDOWS#

Drag and drop windows for tag rules is something I had never thought of, but I like it a lot. In addition to EXIF, digiKam supports the IPTC and XMP formats, so you can perform the described actions on metadata stored in these formats.Thank you for these good ideas. Want to strip all EXIF metadata off the photo? digiKam’s got you covered: choose the Image -> Metadata -> Remove EXIF command, and digiKam scrubs the metadata off the photo. If you keep the original photo, you can easily copy the EXIF metadata from it into the tweaked photo. This feature can come in handy when you use an image editing application that strips all metadata from the edited photo. Using the Image -> Metadata -> Import EXIF command, you can copy EXIF metadata from one photo to another. Here you can modify device manufacturer, device model, exposure-related settings, and other information. For example, to edit hardware-related information, switch to the Device section. The metadata editor conveniently organizes all metadata into sections, making it easier to find and edit specific entries. To edit, for example, EXIF metadata, choose Image -> Metadata -> Edit EXIF. To create a template on the fly, press the Edit button next to the drop-down list.ĭigiKam offers metadata editing tools, too. You can apply an existing template to the photo by selecting it from the Template drop-down list. Since digiKam supports templates, you don’t have to enter this information manually. The Information section of the sidebar allows you to enter additional information about the photo such as licensing terms, location, and contact info. You can use the Caption/Tags sidebar to edit basic metadata such as caption (i.e., the photo’s title), author, date and time as well as assign the photo ratings and tags.

#DIGIKAM APPLYING RECURSIVE TAG FULL#

You can switch between concise and full views as well as print the metadata, save them as a file, and copy them into the clipboard. Inside each digital photo hides metadata in the EXIF, IPTC, or XMP formats, and digiKam provides tools for viewing and editing this useful information.įor starters, digiKam’s main window features the dedicated Metadata sidebar which lets you view EXIF, Makernote, IPTC, and XMP metadata. Transcribed from Dmitri Popov's blog, 22 February 2011

digikam applying recursive tag

українська Work with Photo Metadata in digiKam.






Digikam applying recursive tag