Can anyone confirm this: in View Mode of a JPG-lossless 90° rotated image when I use "Set Selection Ratio -> Same as Image" the selection is not upright, but still across format (i.e. the same as if the image was not rotated).
Also flipping the orientation of the selection does not work than (feature, maybe, to keep the user from accidentally flipping it?)
Martin
Set Selection Ratio -> Same as Image: does not rotate
Moderators: helmut, XnTriq, xnview
This works perfectly for me. Ratio is correct after I lossless rotate image.negg wrote:Can anyone confirm this: in View Mode of a JPG-lossless 90° rotated image when I use "Set Selection Ratio -> Same as Image" the selection is not upright, but still across format (i.e. the same as if the image was not rotated).
Flipping orientation of selection does work in normal mode (not lossless). I don't believe lossless functions are supposed to work on parts of images, other than trimming data from edges.negg wrote:Also flipping the orientation of the selection does not work than (feature, maybe, to keep the user from accidentally flipping it?)
Bug occured in 1.80.1 on WinXP SP2. So maybe it depends on the image. Try with this one:
Test Image (100 k)
Simply taken with my cam out of the window, and lossless rotated 90right.
Martin
Test Image (100 k)
Simply taken with my cam out of the window, and lossless rotated 90right.
Martin
Could you tell me how to reproduce it, please?negg wrote:Bug occured in 1.80.1 on WinXP SP2. So maybe it depends on the image. Try with this one:
Test Image (100 k)
Simply taken with my cam out of the window, and lossless rotated 90right.
Pierre.
Yeah of course:
- Take a jpg with a digital camera
- rotate it 90° lossless
Or simply use my image on http://www.aspekt1.net/ms/temp/ratioTest.jpg
- in fullscreen mode or view mode (appears on both modes) draw a selection with mouse, not too small, not too big
- press D
- Selection is across (more wide than high), while image is upright (less wide than high)
See my commented screenshot to see what I mean.
- Take a jpg with a digital camera
- rotate it 90° lossless
Or simply use my image on http://www.aspekt1.net/ms/temp/ratioTest.jpg
- in fullscreen mode or view mode (appears on both modes) draw a selection with mouse, not too small, not too big
- press D
- Selection is across (more wide than high), while image is upright (less wide than high)
See my commented screenshot to see what I mean.
Bug confirmed. Here is how I recreated problem:
1. Open jpg in tab or standard fullscreen.
2. Press <D> to set ratio same as image.
3. Lossless rotate image with <ctrl shift R> or use mouse.
4. Selecting area works correctly here, BUT...
5. Close image. (once saw crash here; see below+)
6. Restart Program or Open Image again.
7. Set ratio same as image, again.
8. *Now Ratio same as image is incorrect.
9. Using TAB is broken here; see http://newsgroup.xnview.com/viewtopic.php?t=2872
10. Using TAB works again if image is rotated back to original position before any changes were made.
+Xnview crashed when closing image in viewer (using steps above, not fullscreen, using RMB>Close). I cannot repeat this.
Win2k SP4. Rollup update 1.
1. Open jpg in tab or standard fullscreen.
2. Press <D> to set ratio same as image.
3. Lossless rotate image with <ctrl shift R> or use mouse.
4. Selecting area works correctly here, BUT...
5. Close image. (once saw crash here; see below+)
6. Restart Program or Open Image again.
7. Set ratio same as image, again.
8. *Now Ratio same as image is incorrect.
9. Using TAB is broken here; see http://newsgroup.xnview.com/viewtopic.php?t=2872
10. Using TAB works again if image is rotated back to original position before any changes were made.
+Xnview crashed when closing image in viewer (using steps above, not fullscreen, using RMB>Close). I cannot repeat this.
Win2k SP4. Rollup update 1.
Ok, anegg wrote:Yeah of course:
- Take a jpg with a digital camera
- rotate it 90° lossless
Or simply use my image on http://www.aspekt1.net/ms/temp/ratioTest.jpg
- in fullscreen mode or view mode (appears on both modes) draw a selection with mouse, not too small, not too big
- press D
- Selection is across (more wide than high), while image is upright (less wide than high)
See my commented screenshot to see what I mean.

Pierre.