Hello Brandon,
On Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:32:56 +1100, Brandon bran...@flyingtsalers.com
wrote:
[snip]
I know what all of the other things do, but have not been able to find
any documentation on j. The j=0 in that last one seems to be the thing
that
makes this image stack with the first
Hello Brandon,
On Sat, 29 Nov 2014 17:32:56 +1100, Brandon bran...@flyingtsalers.com
wrote:
[snip]
Question 3, what is j mean on the i lines of a pto file?
i w3456 h5184 f10 v=0 Ra=0 Rb=0 Rc=0 Rd=0 Re=0 Eev13.580494060253 Er1
Eb1 r0 .795541422974953 p9.80002443579522 y176.612097040948
Keep in mind that I have not found it in the documentation and am just
guessing by trial and error as I write this. If anyone has better thoughts,
please speak up.
I load 3 images into a file my third image:
On Load
i w5184 h3456 f0 v=0 Ra=0 Rb=0 Rc=0 Rd=0 Re=0 Eev1.52160036448132 Er1 Eb1
r270
On Sun, 30 Nov 2014 15:08:32 +1100, Brandon bran...@flyingtsalers.com
wrote:
[snip]
A big thanks Terry. Mostly motivation to get me to do the work. I had not
changed the pto file in a text editor before that is actually a lot of
fun. I think we have solved Question 2 and Question 3. Anyone
On Saturday, November 29, 2014 8:22:21 PM UTC-8, Tduell wrote:
Perhaps I've missed something in the subsequent discussion, but isn't that
pto_lenstack --new-stack i1, i2, ix?.
I would think so, but no. With out running pto_lenstack again(it has been a
week or two since I last tried