Version: (using KDE KDE 3.5.7) Installed from: SuSE RPMs Not an easy feature to do, but powerful one. I could make some fake example how it works if my explanation is unclear. Note, this is just a suggestion how it might work, however the feature itself is the key here. Let's say you have 100 images, but 50 of them are too big (you didn't properly set your scanner). So you run gwenview, you select "crop" tool, rectangle appears. You click on the first image to crop, you adjust rectangle, you click on the second image, if it is needed you adjust it again. And so on. Then you select all images to crop, and you hit "crop" -- all selected images are cropped using _common_ crop coordinates.
Just a curiosity, why do you want to crop them? to view them? I mean do you want to save the cropped ones? Or it is just a "cropped" view or to print them... In some cases could be a kipi issue in other genview one...
By cropped I meant crop&save. But of course before cropping I would like to view the crop rectangle per every file. Aim -- to make better pdf files (without margins).
*** Bug 153133 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. ***
Git commit 43e6ca4895a1ff6f2b8f98668635a6a64c2a0741 by Gilles Caulier. Committed on 29/12/2012 at 00:13. Pushed by cgilles into branch 'master'. new Batch Queue Manager to crop image. BUGS: 266395 M +1 -0 utilities/queuemanager/CMakeLists.txt A +208 -0 utilities/queuemanager/basetools/transform/crop.cpp [License: GPL (v2+)] A +66 -0 utilities/queuemanager/basetools/transform/crop.h [License: GPL (v2+)] M +2 -0 utilities/queuemanager/manager/batchtoolsmanager.cpp http://commits.kde.org/digikam/43e6ca4895a1ff6f2b8f98668635a6a64c2a0741