Hi to all,
does somebody know is it possible (and how) to convert Canon G5 raw format photo into the ASCII file without loosing any information of each pixel? I want to process such photo as a worksheet of numbers.
Thanks,
Missa
missa Hatchling 2 posts Joined Mar 2005 More info | Mar 23, 2005 06:48 | #1 Hi to all,
LOG IN TO REPLY |
4nR Senior Member 689 posts Joined Feb 2005 Location: A2, MI More info | Mar 23, 2005 07:20 | #2 not sure i understand. do you want to see your image composed of letters and numbers (ascii art http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/gallery/alfons.png A560 will have to do... for now
LOG IN TO REPLY |
lefturn99 Senior Member 820 posts Joined Feb 2005 Location: Tulsa Oklahoma USA More info | Mar 23, 2005 08:47 | #3 I guess you could open it in Notepad, but I'm not sure why. There are some wonderful conversion apps out there. My favorite is RAW Shooter Essentials. Why reinvent the wheel? 6D, 5D Mk III, 60D, EOS M, Gear List
LOG IN TO REPLY |
4nR wrote: not sure i understand. do you want to see your image composed of letters and numbers (ascii art http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/gallery/alfons.png Thank you for reply. Let me be more precise. I want to use my Canon G5 as detetector of spectra that I mesure. So I need all informations that pixels accept during exposure without any "ironing" such are TIFF or JPEG.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Andy_T Compensating for his small ... sensor 9,860 posts Likes: 5 Joined Jan 2003 Location: Hannover Germany More info | Mar 24, 2005 03:40 | #5 If you convert from RAW to 16 BIT TIFF, you will lose very little (no compression). Maybe a bit because of the (minimal) sharpening that you have to select, but certainly not as much as JPG. some cameras, some lenses,
LOG IN TO REPLY |
dbump Senior Member 755 posts Joined Apr 2003 Location: Denver, CO More info | You might look at Canon's SDK, which will provide you with the format for the RAW data: The RD-SDK supports raw file conversion from compatible PowerShot cameras
7D, G10, 17-55 f/2.8 IS, 70-200 f/2.8 IS, 100 Macro, 50 f/1.4, 430EX II
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gkuenning Goldmember More info | Mar 27, 2005 05:03 | #7 The solution to your problem lies in open-source tools. For example, dcraw will do exactly what you want. I don't know if it runs under Windows, but it's definitely available under Linux and should be easy to port to Mac OSX if it's not already running there. The output of dcraw is in the standard PPM format; you may have to pass it through pnmnoraw to turn it into plain ASCII. It would then be trivial to process it further. (Actually, if you're writing code, you should just use the libpnm functions to read the dcraw output directly into an array for further processing.) Geoff
LOG IN TO REPLY |
ScottK Member 96 posts Joined Jun 2004 Location: Oceanside, CA, USA More info | Mar 28, 2005 15:21 | #8 Yes, DCRAW may be your best solution, but would probably require some programming knowledge and effort on your (or somebody's) part.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Apr 01, 2005 09:03 | #9 DCRaw available for Windows: http://www.insflug.org …are/download/windows.php3
LOG IN TO REPLY |
gkuenning Goldmember More info | ScottK wrote: It is a bit obtuse, as its written for compactness (not a single carriage return in the file) ScottK, you need to get yourself a better source viewer, one that understands the conventions used on different systems. dcraw is written in the standard Unix format, with newlines separating the lines of the source. It is very well formatted and (from a very quick glance) should be easy to work with or modify. Geoff
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member was a spammer, and banned as such! 2297 guests, 93 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||