Le 03/09/10 02:17, Philip Graham a écrit :
Hi guys,

...
 
Background note:
I am digitising a legacy collection of 10,000 Kodachrome_25 35mm transparencies with original dates that are meaningless when displayed inside a modern app like "f-spot" or "digicam". I wish to have the option of displaying the thumbnails and previews in filename order as this is how they have been named and saved when manually scanned in high definition raw mode. The date of creation when scanned is meaningless in the timelines as used in apps receiving downloads from digital cameras. But I was discouraged when I looked at the C# code in "f-spot" as to what to change to create the filename thumbnail display to govern an order of display. In the scans I embed full descriptions of subject matter along with the copyright and date definitions using the power of EXIF tagging. Presently I use the perl-based 'ExifTool' on the command line, but I would really like to do this under Python hence my interest in in your excellent pyexiv2.
I do not understand the obsession with timelines in the current crop of digital photo apps. Surely there are enough of the large number of colour transparencies being scanned in to warrant the option of filename-based displays in suitable display-management apps?
Greetings from the newbie
 

Hi,

I invite you to try this app :

http://www.oqapy.eu
--
Vincent V.V.
Oqapy
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