on 06/17/2008 04:37 AM Anders Kvist wrote:
oleksandr korneta wrote:
on 06/16/2008 05:44 PM Anders Kvist wrote:
Can you explain how you are trying to delete a directory?

my apologies, perhaps I was not clear enough.

Consider the following scenario:

1) imagine a bunch of raws in ~/shooting_session_001/
Sure...

2) I open the rawstudio, point it to the ~/shooting_session_001/, process the pictures, export everything to *.jpeg, quit rawstudio.
Yes...

3) copy *.jpeg to some other place and delete ~/shooting_session_001/ (using third-party file manager, rm -rf or whatever you prefer) along with all the *.raw in it.
I don't understand why you wanna delete rawfiles, but ok :)

In fact these are moved to another place, but that's irrelevant information to the subject, therefore just consider the directory as "deleted".


4) open rawstudio, click on the "Open" tab on the right panel. Guess what I see -- the directory tree along with my ~/shooting_session_001/. Wait! Didn't I just delet it?
In my test I don't see the directory...it's gone

lucky you. In my case the same deleted directories are recreated every time I open rawstudio, and it's been happening for a last month.

5) Hm... Let me check with external file manager. Nope -- actually, it is back where it was!

Which version of rawstudio are you using?

$ rpm -qi rawstudio
Name        : rawstudio                    Relocations: (not elocatable)
Version     : 1.0                               Vendor: Fedora Project
Release : 1.fc8 Build Date: Tue 13 May 2008 05:48:10 AM EDT Install Date: Sat 24 May 2008 12:00:53 AM EDT Build Host: hammer2.fedora.redhat.com Group : Applications/Multimedia Source RPM: rawstudio-1.0-1.fc8.src.rpm
Size        : 519781                           License: GPLv2+
Signature : DSA/SHA1, Tue 20 May 2008 04:03:38 PM EDT, Key ID b44269d04f2a6fd2
Packager    : Fedora Project
URL         : http://www.rawstudio.org
Summary     : Read, manipulate and convert digital camera raw images


--
regards,
Oleksandr Korneta

I'm running FC7 x86_64 and FC8 i386 on x86_64 hardware, should this matter.

/The nice thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from./



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