This morning I tried out the Attachment Viewer web app and noticed that photos within the same feature layer and displayed in other web apps (Basic Viewer and Time Aware web app) which show the correct orientation are shown upside down in the attachment viewer app. Why would this be? I can look at the photo attachment in the AGOL web map and it looks great (right direction), but when I click on the same feature in the Attachment Viewer the photo is upside down.
I have the same issue if you could please help me out. The images were taken with Collector. They are all oriented correctly in the web map. In the attachment viewer, the landscape photos are oriented correctly, but all portrait photos are rotated. Most of my photos are portrait mode photos unfortunately, and I have upwards of 1000 photos in my application. Please help! Thank you.
Rotate Photo
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I'm experiencing the same issue. The photos used in the Attachment Viewer I've assembled were taken with the Survey123 app. Photo orientation is correct when viewing the attachment links in an ArcGIS Online web map, but all portrait mode photos are displaying in landscape orientation in the Attachment Viewer. Is this a bug within the application template?
Seeing an issue when the iPad has screen rotate lock set in settings 123 does not see the iPad get flipped and then the photos are rotated wrong. I thought there was a rotate photo button in the app but I cannot find it. I found some posts on a setting but cannot find it.
The screen lock issue with landscape photos is logged as BUG-000148047. The current best approach is to not use the screen lock feature on iOS in portrait mode if you are planning to use the app in landscape mode to take photos.
The photo imported is rotated 90 degrees to the left and I am not able to rotate it myself. THis happens on a Mac and on a WIndows computer. So obviously I am doing something wrong.
But what?
Bert
I want to rotate a photo in Affinity Photo or in Affinity Deisgner but I seemingly can't rotate a mathematical amount.
I can use the Straighten tool, but that is not what I what, I want to be able to say, "hey, this image can rotate clockwise by 5degrees" . I can see the rotate links for 90degree rotations but that's obviously not the same. The straighten tool is very imprecise as it relies on eye rather than any mathematical int or float value (such as 5.75 degrees)
Have I missed something obvious? :-/
Cheers
Martin
AF does some amazing things, but this is the kind of thing that makes it incredibly frustrating to use. When I select the crop tool, there's a Rotate button, which works in an odd way. With a photo in 3:2 aspect ratio, it crops the photo as though it were in 2:3. (And the Crop tool is really painful, trying to use custom aspect rations; when I set it to 3:2, it keeps switching to 2:3.
@toltec Thanks for that. All those are things that are not obvious. Such as why clicking Rotate on a 3:2 ratio converts it to 2:3; what's the logic there? I just reopened a file I was trying to rotate earlier, and even in Unconstrained, clicking Rotate shifts the aspect ratio from landscape to portrait; that seems like a bug to me. And I don't see any way to get that top handle that you show in your screenshots.
Ah yes, it wont appear with the crop tool (only when rotating, sorry if I confused you) , but if you move the pointer around outside any crop box edge, you will get the rotate icon and you can free rotate.
Ah yes, it wont appear with the master crop tool (only when rotating, sorry if I confused you) , but if you move the pointer around outside any crop box edge, you will get the rotate icon and you can free rotate.
Unless my tired old brain has deteriorated even more than I thought, I think that should say it rotates the crop area by 90. Anyway, it is useful because users don't need to clutter up the Mode menu with (for example) separate custom presets for 3:2 & 2:3 aspect ratios.
Sometimes pictures are displayed sideways or upside-down on your computer or after publishing online. The most obvious way to avoid an incorrect orientation is to keep a proper camera position while taking a photo. But that might not be enough when opening the photo in software that doesn't honor the orientation metadata.
Default orientation depends on a camera or smartphone a photo was taken on. Most devices save the orientation metadata based on the sensor which detects the camera's position. Unfortunately, in some applications pictures will look wrong because the orientation tag is disregarded. In this case, you can physically rotate the photo by 90 degrees left or right to change image orientation from landscape to portrait, or the other way around. Remarkably, the quality of rotated pictures shouldn't decrease because their internal pixel data will be intact.
When it comes to image rotating, you may need to improve image appearance or change the orientation from portrait to landscape, or vice versa. However, the rotation is not only about image orientation. It is an instrument to create a wonderful piece of art when just changing an angle can improve the overall image perception. To help you with the task, there is a wide variety of applications to rotate an image online, where ResizePixel is one of them.
With ResizePixel's free photo rotator, you can rotate a GIF, JPG, BMP, PNG, WEBP or TIFF image by 90 degrees left or right. To rotate the image by 180 or 270 degrees, turn the photo clockwise or counterclockwise multiple times. There is no limit to perfection, so let's get started now!
ResizePixel provides a free and quality service to rotate pictures online from your browser. We use the latest technologies to ensure the reliable encryption of your pictures and superior performance for the best user experience.
Hi @justin, thank you for your response. In my dashboard, I show an image from a url which has some text that the user needs to validate. The images sometimes are rotated side way, and we need to be able to rotate it back to be able to read.
Now I'd like to know if there is a way how to rotate picture at
Control Points tab.
It sometimes "mysteriously" rotate and I'd like to rotate it back.If there isn't such feature yet, do you plan it for future releases?Thank you---
Regards
Martin Luke
Hugin displays your photos the right way as best as it can. Initially
it uses the EXIF metadata, but once you start aligning it uses the
rotation of the photos in the panorama.If your panorama is upside down (which Hugin is happy to let you do,
it doesn't 'know' anything about gravity), the images in the Control
Points tab will be upside down too.--
Bruno
Control points are for aligning the component photos to each other,
not for aligning the panorama to the viewing frame.The right way to rotate a pano is just to drag it around in the
preview window (right mouse button; in slow preview the cursor point
jumps to the horizon; in fast preview you get a true rotary drag).
Trying to rotate it by fiddling with control points would lead to
disaster in my hands.Dragging the preview is also the right way to make the horizon exactly
straight, or vertical lines exactly vertical, which is the same
thing. I believe there is a lot of confusion about this, due to the
historical existence of 'horizontal' and 'vertical' control points --
which were a poor substitute for dragging the pano, are no longer
needed, and best not used.The general straight line control points are a different story, they
serve an important function for aligning photos and don't try to
impose any orientation on the whole pano.Cheers, Tom
On Apr 12, 11:46 am, Bruno Postle wrote:
> 2010/4/12 Martin Luke :
If you are referring to the condition where one or more pictures
appear rotated in the Control Points tab AFTER you have performed some
level of Optimizing then you in fact have one or more errant marked
points that have caused Hugin to rotate the images. For that situation
the optimization process determined the best fit to minimize the
errors between all the points is with the images rotated as you see
them. You can bully the images back to how they should be by adding
enough good marked points, but you really should find and delete the
errant marked points. That task is something you need to learn how to
do. In time you will learn what parts of an image are likely to fool
the automatic point generators. Sometimes it is best to manually
enter all the marked points associated with the rotated picture. To do
that you probably will want the picture properly rotated in the
Control Points tab after it has already been improperly rotated by
Hugin and after you have deleted the marked points for that picture.
That rotate task is what I think you are asking about and it sometimes
does make sense to have the ability in the Control Points tab but you
must realize that Hugin has evolved bit by bit over a long time. The
location where you correct the rotation is back at the Images tab and
that tab and its place in the intended work path scheme is much older
in the programming evolution. I suspect asking for the rotation
function at the Control Points tab may be considered heresy.Rotating pictures is simply accomplished by manually changing the
"roll" value in the Images tab for that picture. Select the image in
the Images list and then type in the new roll value. Pictures appear
90 degrees clockwise rotated in the Control Points tab when the roll
value is 45 or greater. Pictures appear 90 degrees counter-clockwise
rotated when the roll value is -46 or smaller. Similarly, pictures
appear upside-down when the roll value is 135. Note that the roll
value is recalculated when you Optimize again. You pictures may flip
again if the errant marked points were not removed.Allan 006ab0faaa
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