I have been participating in a school project to design and write a piece of software in our open-ended "Software Engineering" course. The project in question is, like F-spot, a photo organization/management app that relies on file-stored metadata.
In the course of doing so, we have written some features that may be useful for f-spot. The one personally wrote, and would like to see live on the non-Windows side of the fence, is an algorithm to group pictures of similar dates. The user is permitted to control what "similar" means via a slider. The purpose is that disorganized pictures can be quickly broken down into convenient groups that can then have metadata applied en masse, since most people don't have metadata to begin with and are lazy. The code in question relies on little more than basic data structures in System.Collections and the use of Array.Sort, so I don't think portability from MS .NET 1.1 to Mono .NET should be an issue. The only hard requirement for information required from the application is an object that supplies me with a DateTime for which the picture was taken. If there is any interest in adopting such a piece of code for F-spot, let me know so I can clean up the source code a bit, annotate it with copyright (I'm about to leave college, so a tiny bit of advertising wouldn't hurt), and hand it over. If you have access to a Windows machine with .NET 2.0 (we switched over, so other parts of the project do depend on the newer CLR) you can give this thing a whirl and see if you feel it is useful. So far reactions have been very positive, and it guesses quite well. I was told a few weeks back after I had written this that in fact Apple implemented something functionally similar, which they call "stacking" in some product of theirs, which made me sad that I was no longer unique, but the price of my code is right ;). As for size: the code is about 700 lines long, including curly braces and comments. df _______________________________________________ F-spot-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/f-spot-list
