if you use the `constant size' aspect ratio, 5% means 5% of the width. all others use 5% of the width, too, but compute the bottom/top border from that via the aspect ratio.
end of the story is that at some point you know the total amount of pixels you're supposed to add to the picture, then that is partitioned into up/down and left/right portions, which might result in different numbers for left and right if the total was an odd number (or else we would need to resample your picture, making it unsharp). j. On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 12:32 AM, John P Santos <[email protected]> wrote: > What exactly does Darktable do to determine the width of a frame? > > I have noticed that the thickness of a resultant 5% frame on a portrait and > landscape of raws from the same camera, when exported yield different sized > frames. How is this frame calculated, why is there this inconsistency? I > would like to be able to use frames so I can export an image to print... if > possible. > > - J > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Master Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL, ASP.NET, C# 2012, HTML5, CSS, > MVC, Windows 8 Apps, JavaScript and much more. Keep your skills current > with LearnDevNow - 3,200 step-by-step video tutorials by Microsoft > MVPs and experts. ON SALE this month only -- learn more at: > http://p.sf.net/sfu/learnnow-d2d > _______________________________________________ > Darktable-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Free Next-Gen Firewall Hardware Offer Buy your Sophos next-gen firewall before the end March 2013 and get the hardware for free! Learn more. http://p.sf.net/sfu/sophos-d2d-feb _______________________________________________ Darktable-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users
