Some photos have a GPS latitude and GPS Longitude in the Metadata. I cannot find an easy way to copy this info to the clipboard so I can paste it into a map to mark the location. If I click on latitude field I can highlight any one PART of the GPS, but not the whole field at once. It would be helpful to get the WHOLE latitude (or longitude) into the clipboard at once (degrees, minutes and seconds). And even if I do highlight a part, and press Ctrl-C nothing is copied to the clipboard.
In a related note, it would be nice to be able to display the GPS coordinates as a decimal value (+/- 90 or 180 degrees with a decimal for the rest of the coordinate - this is a single number and better for pasting than the combined degrees/minutes/seconds.
If you make a button that runs Image LOCATE=google it will open Google Maps at the GPS location of the selected image. No need to use the clipboard at all.
It would be good, if we could enter both, decimal or ° ' " formats, because it's a hassle to convert the decimal format, which is mostly used when you get your data from BING or Google maps, to the format Opus uses.
There are a couple web sites out there, where you can make the conversion, but it's still a lot of extra work. I guess, that it's quite a simple conversion algorithm, so maybe it could be implemented in Opus?
The command works (but you knew that). Is there a way to cause it to NOT deselect the file being mapped? Is there a way to map multiple files at the same time? Both would be nice, but are not critical.
Thank you Leo. I knew there was a command like that, but searching the manual for it proved elusive. I did not use the correct search term. Knowing the command name, I was able to find it. Not knowing the name was problematic. Searching on "keep selection" did not work.
It would be good, if we could enter both, decimal or ° ' " formats, because it's a hassle to convert the decimal format, which is mostly used when you get your data from BING or Google maps, to the format Opus uses.[/quote]
Yep, certainly would speed things up if you know where you took the photo and have located it in google, CalTopo, or GMap$ or other map suites that all seem to use DECIMAL format right in the URL