Welcome to Camera Bits Forums
Currently our work flow requires a {caption} export using "Text Exporter" from multiple images to one .txt file and then the captions are edited for style and spelling/composition in MS Word. Is there a way PM could pull this info back out of the .txt file and ingest it back into the corresponding images? thanks for considering.
It is unlikely that PM would ever be able to handle a Word file as input.
OK I tried the scripting and in the end I got it to work but, I'm not sure if this is any better. PM please add a input from .txt feature.
How about putting this text export in a code replacement format like:{fbas}{tab}{caption}Then when it is edited in Word simply use it as a codereplacement file and apply to all images a capton having \{fbas}\ in the caption field?I think it would work fine as a "reverse text exporter".
Would it work of you structured the TXT file with the old caption, a tab, then the new, edited caption. Then did a code replacement based on the old cation?
Mick,Quote from: mklass on January 28, 2011, 03:17:39 AMWould it work of you structured the TXT file with the old caption, a tab, then the new, edited caption. Then did a code replacement based on the old cation?As long as the original caption had no tabs or new lines (cr) in them (basically when copied and pasted all of the text would be on one line with no intervening tabs) then yes, it would work.-Kirk
Quote from: Kirk Baker on January 28, 2011, 05:46:33 AMQuote from: mklass on January 28, 2011, 03:17:39 AMWould it work of you structured the TXT file with the old caption, a tab, then the new, edited caption. Then did a code replacement based on the old cation?As long as the original caption had no tabs or new lines (cr) in them (basically when copied and pasted all of the text would be on one line with no intervening tabs) then yes, it would work.I think my {fbas} version is a step simpler (presuming the filename does not change) than the one involving the full old caption as such a complex text may cause problems if a tab or some special characters (ancients for example) are involved.I think keeping the code replacement code (a full old caption versus the filename) as simple as it is possible can help eleminate possible error factors.
Quote from: mklass on January 28, 2011, 03:17:39 AMWould it work of you structured the TXT file with the old caption, a tab, then the new, edited caption. Then did a code replacement based on the old cation?As long as the original caption had no tabs or new lines (cr) in them (basically when copied and pasted all of the text would be on one line with no intervening tabs) then yes, it would work.