nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pm
Sorry (really!) , but you are totally wrong (see below).
Unfortunately, you don't know what you're talking about. It's regrettable to need to be so blunt, but I don't want other readers to be mislead by all the errors in your post.
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pm
These are lot of insinuations, wrong statements, and misunderstanding.
Yes, on your part.
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pmFoV is in angles right (Do you really need the formula from radians to degrees?

)
You evidently don't know the difference or the consequences. Do you expect the value for a wide angle lens to be 1.9, or 110? Why else did you provide a formula that gives an answer that isn't exactly what want or what users would expect?
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pm... and this tag in 99.99% isn't used.
Not used by whom? You? I'm not surprised. But Exiftool shows it for all my camera images. If you have a lot of camera images where Exiftool is not presenting the ScaleFactorTo35mmEquivalent value, then go complain on the Exiftool forum. Then go learn how to use it.
Start by reading this:
https://exiftool.org/config.html
I had considered writing the function for you, to be nice so that you could just use it. But after reading your post, I changed my mind.
The ability to add arbitrary user-defined tags (which can do very complex calculations if necessary in Perl) is a highly valuable capability and very useful information, for anyone that actually wants to learn. That's why I mentioned this. But perhaps other people can still benefit from it, even if you don't want to.
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pmSorry, Mr. "AoV" (never heard of that

), but your post is wrong all over.
Your ignorance, and the arrogance with which you assert it, is becoming rather appalling. Because you have never heard of something, you think it's wrong. You can't be bothered to look it up and correct yourself. You should have done a little more research, and been a little more open minded. The fact that you've never heard of Angle of View shows just how limited your knowledge and experience actually is.
It might interest you to know (although probably not, because you can't accept you're wrong) that both Canon and Nikon specify their lenses using Angle of View, not field of view. Here are some links. Read the specs.
https://www.nikonusa.com/p/nikkor-z-20m ... tech-specs
https://en.canon-cna.com/lenses/rf-16mm ... fications/
Nikon says: "Maximum Angle of View (DX-format) 70°"
Canon says: "Angle of View (Horizontal, vertical, diagonal) 98°, 74°10, 108°10"
And the angle is specified in degrees, not radians. (Why? Because that is how people expect it. Which means that the formula you got from a chatbot is useless for the intended purpose. If you were shown in the GUI that metadata for all your images, and the range of values was 0 to 3.14, as your formula would provide, you would complain.)
So does Sony:
https://electronics.sony.com/imaging/le ... /sel16f18g
So does Fuji:
https://shopusa.fujifilm-x.com/xf14mmf2 ... attributes
So does Olympus/OM System:
https://explore.omsystem.com/us/en/m-zu ... -pro-black
Read the specs.
The engineers who are providing the specifications to the marketing people actually know what they're talking about. Since you're disputing it, what does that say about you?
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pm
P.S.
You are right, that in principle the correct term would be
angle of view.
CONGRATULATIONS! Finally, at the end, you show a glimmer of understanding.
nji9 wrote: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:06 pmBut the common term for the angle is "field of view" (FoV, hFoV, vFoV, dFoV).
Many mistakes are common. Lots of people say dolphins are fish. Lots of people use the "word" irregardless. Lots of people think weight and mass are the same. Or that Centrifugal Force exists. They are wrong. Being common does not make it correct, nor does the fact that Wikipedia perpetuates it.
So many people make the mistake about FoV that it has become a highly ambiguous term. When discussing technical matters, an ambiguous term is useless. It's like talking about the "size" of an image. What does that actually mean? This is why you start to see people talk about "Angular Field of View AFoV" or "Linear Field of View LFoV" because the misused term "FoV" by itself has become useless. If people could correctly refer to the "dimensions" of an image instead of "size" then much confusion would be eliminated. Likewise AoV and FoV should be used correctly.
If you're going to suggest that software be modified to include new data, at least make the suggested data correct.
Bottom line: You can add what you want to Exiftool today through a user-defined tag, or ask for someone else to update their software for you and wait.
Please just educate yourself before you embarrass yourself further. Try to learn before trying to argue.
Goodbye.