On 09/21/12 16:48, Alexandre Prokoudine wrote: > On Sat, Sep 22, 2012 at 2:02 AM, Gary Aitken wrote: > >> I'm trying to automate a process, and don't want to have to manually start >> ufraw. >> I could start ufraw and use its "gimp" button to transfer >> control to gimp, but that doesn't do what I want either -- >> if you tell ufraw to "save" to get the .ufraw file saved, it quits; >> so then you can't transfer control to gimp. >> >> Fundamentally, I want to do the following: >> >> specify a set of raw file names to process >> specify a destination directory >> for each raw file: >> >> a. process in ufraw >> a1. manual crop, etc., if desired >> a2. save a .ufraw file in the source directory >> b. process in gimp >> b1. manual manipulation if desired >> b2. automatic resizing and sharpening, etc >> b3. automatically generate a .jpeg file in the destination directory > > Is there a reason you can't save .ufraw for each file, then run ufraw > in batch mode to create TIFF files for further editing with GIMP? > > I'm wondering, because it's something I used to do a lot some 4 or 5 > years ago, before darktable was conceived.
Thanks for the suggestion; a variant of that idea may work. >> On 09/22/2012 12:17 AM, Gerald wrote: >> As far as I know, UFRaw is mostly a graphical front-end for the command-line >> utility DCRaw. On 09/21/12 16:35, Partha Bagchi wrote: > It is a modified version and so not as up to date as DCRaw which has > all the options you need. :) Unfortunately, I need the gui interface to determine what the parameters should be -- crops and exposure mods, for example. _______________________________________________ gimp-user-list mailing list gimp-user-list@gnome.org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user-list