Hi again, I just downloaded tpsDig2 at home and tried it on the same images that were giving us trouble in the lab, and there doesn't seem to be any problem at all, so I guess we're just running the old version there. Thanks for all the quick replies and helpful tips, everyone!
Leah On 10/20/06, *morphmet* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: The reason that works is that some images are just too large for TPSDig. Tpsdig2 is supposed to handle larger images better. If you have problems with particular images in tpsdig2 then please send me the file so I can try to reproduce the problem. -------- Sent remotely by F. James Rohlf -----Original Message----- From: morphmet < [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2006 13:02:08 To:[email protected] <mailto:To:[email protected]> Subject: RE: shifting dots in tpsDIG I've encountered leaping landmarks, and I've always been able to fix it by cropping my images in Photoshop, often only slightly. On reopening tpsDig, the image behaves fine. Not sure why this would be. -Jonathan Krieger > > morphmet wrote: > >> Hello, morphmet list, > >> > >> When I zoom in and out in tpsDIG, the dots shift. This defeats the > >> purpose, obviously, so I'm guessing I'm either missing a function > >> that the program offers, or else the idea is that one > shouldn't place > >> landmarks on different parts of the same image at different > >> magnifications. (The specimens are helically coiled snail > shells, and > >> the features in the earlier whorls - though putatively > homologous - > >> are vastly tinier than in the later coils, so being able > to zoom in > >> at the top would really help.) Can someone shed some light on this? > >> > >> Thanks, > >> Leah Reilly > >> (CUNY EEB Ph.D. student) > >> > >> > > > > > > > > -- > Replies will be sent to the list. > For more information visit http://www.morphometrics.org > > -- Replies will be sent to the list. For more information visit http://www.morphometrics.org -- Replies will be sent to the list. For more information visit http://www.morphometrics.org -- oh, fortuna! -- Replies will be sent to the list. For more information visit http://www.morphometrics.org
