Raw warnings are relative to the RAW file before any extra DT processing. These cannot change.
Instead "classic" warnings are relative to the image with the current processing applied, in other words are relative to the image you are going to export (the "jpeg"). If you have "image" clippings you can fix (or create) these in a lot of ways (exposure, tone curve, base curve, etc.). If you have RAW clippings you need some kind of smart "filler" to try to reconstruct/guess the missing data (color reconstruction, maybe others). So you may have about any combination: you may have "jpeg only" clippings where the RAW was fine (quite common) and RAW clippings that were later "filled/recovered" by processing (less common). In general RAW clippings set the limit to what you can easily recover. See also: http://www.darktable.org/2016/10/raw-overexposed/ http://www.darktable.org/2015/03/color-reconstruction/ Bye Lorenzo 2017-03-09 16:27 GMT+01:00 <[email protected]>: > DT 2.2.3 on arch > > The bottom panel: > > * Raw overexposed warning > * Over/underexposed warning > > https://www.darktable.org/usermanual/ch03s03s09.html.php > > (I understand that raw overexposed doesn't show the underexposed) > > -- > sknahT > > vyS > ____________________________________________________________ > ________________ > darktable user mailing list > to unsubscribe send a mail to darktable-user+unsubscribe@ > lists.darktable.org > > ____________________________________________________________________________ darktable user mailing list to unsubscribe send a mail to [email protected]
