Sv: Macro i Photo Shop
har ar det jag hittade i photoshop help. borjan har du ju redan gatt igenom, men kanske punkt 6 och framat (spec kursiva delar samt punkt 8) kanske hjalper?:
To batch-process files
1. Choose File > Automate > Batch.
2. Specify the action you want to use to process files from the Set and Action pop-up menus. The menus display actions available in the Actions palette. You may need to choose a different set or load a set in the palette if you don’t see your action.
3. Choose the files to process from the Source pop-up menu:
Folder Processes files in a folder you specify. Click Choose to locate and select the folder.
Import Processes images from a digital camera, scanner, or a PDF document.
Opened Files Processes all open files.
Bridge Processes selected files in Adobe Bridge. If no files are selected, the files in the current Bridge folder are processed.
4. Set processing options:
Override Action “Open” Commands Overrides Open commands in an action that refers to specific file names, rather than the batched files. Deselect Override Action “Open” Commands if the action was recorded to operate on open files or if the action contains Open commands for specific files that are required by the action. If you select this option, the action must contain an Open command or the source files will not open.
Include All Subfolders Processes files in subdirectories of the specified folder.
Suppress Color Profile Warnings Turns off display of color policy messages.
Suppress File Open Options Dialogs Hides File Open Options dialog boxes. This is useful when batching actions on camera raw image files. The default or previously specified settings will be used.
5. Choose a destination for the processed files from the Destination menu:
None Leaves the files open without saving changes (unless the action includes a Save command).
Save And Close Saves the files in their current location, overwriting the original files.
Folder Saves the processed files to another location. Click Choose to specify the destination folder.
6. If the action includes a Save As command, choose Override Action “Save As” Commands to make sure files are saved to the folder you specified (or to their original folder if you chose Save and Close.) To use this option, the action must contain a Save As command, whether or not it specifies a save location or file name; otherwise, no files will be saved.
Some Save options are not available in the Batch command (such as JPEG compression or TIFF options). To use these options, record them in the action, then use the Override Action “Save As” Commands option to make sure that your files are saved where you specify in the Batch command.
If you record an action that saves with a specified file name and folder and deselect Override Action “Save As” Commands, the same file will be overwritten each time. If you’ve recorded your Save As step in the action without specifying a file name, the Batch command will save it to the same folder each time, but will use the file name of the document being saved.
7. If you chose Folder as the destination, specify a file-naming convention and select file compatibility options for the processed files:
- For File Naming, select elements from the pop-up menus or enter text into the fields to be combined into the default names for all files. The fields let you change the order and formatting of the components of the file name. You must include at least one field that is unique for every file (for example, file name, serial number, or serial letter) to prevent files from overwriting each other. Starting Serial Number specifies the starting number for any serial number fields. Serial letter fields always start with the letter “A” for the first file.
- For File Name Compatibility, choose Windows, Mac OS, and UNIX to make file names compatible with Windows, Mac OS, and UNIX operating systems.
Saving files using the Batch command options usually saves the files in the same format as the original files. To create a batch process that saves files in a new format, record the Save As command followed by the Close command as part of your original action. Then choose Override Action “Save In” Commands for the Destination when setting up the batch process.
8. Select an option for error processing from the Errors pop-up menu:
Stop For Errors Suspends the process until you confirm the error message.
Log Errors To File Records each error in a file without stopping the process. If errors are logged to a file, a message appears after processing. To review the error file, open with a text editor after the Batch command has run.