I use hugin for producing panoramic photos and thought I could use lux as a
quick way to make jpgs using the hugin-produced .PTOs and original (sub)images.
For 2D output rectilinear quickly becomes unwieldy as the size increases, and
for architecural images spherical is really not a good choice.
I see, so it's about stitching a PTO file and producing an image which
'looks nice' as a whole, rather than being good to view with a panorama
viewer. For that purpose, using hugin/enblend is probably the better
choice, but the process (create remapped partials first, then stitch
them) is indeed a bit circuitous, compared to lux' integrated process.
When I look at the way how lux handles a PTO file specifying an
unhandled projection (like Panini) in the p-line, I admit it's
'ungraceful' - the p-line is only relevant for stitching, lux could
display the PTO in any of the target projections it can handle, and a
failure would only be necessary if the user actually requested stitching
to the p-line, like when pressing 'Shift+E' or using --stitch=yes. I'll
keep that in mind for the next version. Thank you for your input, sorry
I can't be more helpful right now.
Kay
--
A list of frequently asked questions is available at:
http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ
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