Sorry for posting troubles. New site, permissions is not tuned. Should work for now.
I'm not understand the idea with folder recursion. Imagine really big RAW archive (e.g. 10Tb) split into folder structure (Year/Month/Event name/subfolders in my case). What the viewer should do when we open top folder with recursion enabled?
In most common case, if you have nested folder structure, all files resides on deepest level.
So, the program will need to do full folder recursion before 1st file will be found. It will be VERY slow on big folder structure (and/or on relatively slow network storage).
David English (not verified)
Thu, 05/15/2014 - 02:37
Permalink
Would it be possible to
Would it be possible to incorporate a grid view of the entire folder I want to examine?
Thanks,
David
lexa
Thu, 05/15/2014 - 11:39
Permalink
There is no plans for grid
There is no plans for grid view in near future.
We're discussing possibility to add 'filmstrip' at screen bottom, like Adobe Bridge do.
--
Alex Tutubalin/FastRawViewer team
lexa
Thu, 05/15/2014 - 11:39
Permalink
There is no plans for grid
There is no plans for grid view in near future.
We're discussing possibility to add 'filmstrip' at screen bottom, like Adobe Bridge do.
--
Alex Tutubalin/FastRawViewer team
bwana
Thu, 05/15/2014 - 10:03
Permalink
it says i cannot post new
it says i cannot post new content. well, just a suggestion, allow recursive folder opening. i have a deeply nested folder structure.
lexa
Thu, 05/15/2014 - 11:37
Permalink
Sorry for posting troubles.
Sorry for posting troubles. New site, permissions is not tuned. Should work for now.
I'm not understand the idea with folder recursion. Imagine really big RAW archive (e.g. 10Tb) split into folder structure (Year/Month/Event name/subfolders in my case). What the viewer should do when we open top folder with recursion enabled?
--
Alex Tutubalin/FastRawViewer team
stefan (not verified)
Sat, 05/17/2014 - 10:13
Permalink
show all the images in all
show all the images in all the folders with the path at the bottom of each image
lexa
Sat, 05/17/2014 - 10:21
Permalink
In most common case, if you
In most common case, if you have nested folder structure, all files resides on deepest level.
So, the program will need to do full folder recursion before 1st file will be found. It will be VERY slow on big folder structure (and/or on relatively slow network storage).
--
Alex Tutubalin/FastRawViewer team
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