The 'Create Panorama Image' is already there for a long time. Without almost any change.
There was not very much attention to this tool, also by me, until the recent probs with the overlay text in the IP version.
So I've made a kind of wish-list for this tool :
1~ A keyboard shortcut
Now, if the files have different dimensions, the files are resized to the width or height of the 1st file of the list.
2~ A search for the biggest bitmap in the list, and make that the default width or height.
Ok, one can say: then re-order the filelist and put the biggest bitmap at nr 1, but that's maybe often a non-solution, because one did choose for a particular file order from e.g. left to right.
A logic follow-up:
3~ The choice which file in the list will define the default width or height of the rest.
4~ No resizing at all. The width or height is picked from the biggest one, and the rest keeps its own pixelsize, with the loose space filled up with e.g. the background color. The Canvas function.
Far future refinements :
5~ Spacing the bitmaps by a canvas nr of pixels, only hor. or vert., according to the current Panorama mode.
6~ Using it as a 2D tool, so both hor. and vert. are active at the same time, making some kind of table with cells.
There was not very much attention to this tool, also by me, until the recent probs with the overlay text in the IP version.
So I've made a kind of wish-list for this tool :
1~ A keyboard shortcut
Now, if the files have different dimensions, the files are resized to the width or height of the 1st file of the list.
2~ A search for the biggest bitmap in the list, and make that the default width or height.
Ok, one can say: then re-order the filelist and put the biggest bitmap at nr 1, but that's maybe often a non-solution, because one did choose for a particular file order from e.g. left to right.
A logic follow-up:
3~ The choice which file in the list will define the default width or height of the rest.
4~ No resizing at all. The width or height is picked from the biggest one, and the rest keeps its own pixelsize, with the loose space filled up with e.g. the background color. The Canvas function.
Far future refinements :
5~ Spacing the bitmaps by a canvas nr of pixels, only hor. or vert., according to the current Panorama mode.
6~ Using it as a 2D tool, so both hor. and vert. are active at the same time, making some kind of table with cells.
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